Realtime Website Analytics how can you get Apidexin? | magnoliaeducationfoundation.org

by admin on October 27, 2011

Question by kimi: how can you get Apidexin?
okay, apidexin is a diet pill, and they say its works the fastest,is the safest.
but i want to know if it has to be prescribed or can you buy it in a convenience store??
i really need it, i don’t want people saying that’s its bad for me. i just really need to know

Best answer:

Answer by George Parker
You don’t really need it. You just think you do. Here’s what Wikipedia has to say about it.

“As of 2008[update], no human studies on fucoxanthin have been published, so it remains to be seen whether it is of any value in human obesity.”

Dietary supplements are poorly regulated in the US. They do not have to conform to the stringent standards applied to pharmaceuticals or food products. The result of this absence of oversight has resulted in a huge market which includes everything from genuine, high quality products to over priced placebos which contribute only trace amounts of the active ingredient. And, to make supplement matters worse, bootleggers from outside the US can sell supplements via the internet just as they do brand name drugs and circumvent the controls put in place by the federal government. For this reason it is difficult but important to know what you are getting when you buy a dietary supplement.

The best rule to follow when considering buying a supplement is to ask yourself if you really need it. If a supplement was not recommended by a health care professional (preferably a physician or physician’s referral), you probably don’t need it. If you think you need it, you should ask yourself why? What are the reasons? And, if you find you do not have a rock solid, legitimate reason for taking the supplement, you probably should avoid it.

Supplement manufacturers to not have to reveal what their product contains or how much it contains. That means they can sell you trace (tiny) amounts of something such as creatine, advertise extravagant claims about what it will do for you, charge you 100 times what the product costs to market, make and distribute, and not be in violation of any US laws. That is the snake oil salesman’s dream and that is why there are so many “snake oil” salesmen making fantastic claims about products which deliver nothing for an outrageous price. Caveat Emptor!

Here are some simple rules to follow regarding dietary supplements.
- If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.
- Buy only what has been recommended by your health care professional.
- Avoid anything making outlandish claims.
- Avoid formulas which do not reveal the ingredients.

Here are some links to help you find the truth about supplements from the people who know the most, care about your well being, and don’t want to sell you anything: Your government.

- General info you can count on about dietary supplements. Use the links.

http://www.fda.gov/food/dietarysupplements/default.htm

- An FDA white paper with links to supplement info. Use the links

http://www.fda.gov/Food/DietarySupplements/ConsumerInformation/ucm110567.htm

- An A through Z listing of supplements and what you should know about them.

http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/dietarysupplements.html

Be smart. Before buying, do your homework. Remember, fitness begins with your brain.

Good luck!!

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