Weight Loss Pills Studies - Author Reveals Hoodia Clinical Study Scam

Many dieters rely on sales representations based on so-called clinical studies. Normally the details of the study quoted are never revealed. Some studies use as few as a dozen or fewer volunteers. One Hoodia study widely cited is simply hogwash.
 
Dec. 5, 2009 - PRLog -- Sales claims for popular diet pills often contain phrases like "clinically proven" or claims are purportedly bolstered by "clinical studies."  During his recent research into the diet pills industry, author David J. Webb discovered that one such widely referenced study used for Hoodia claims was based on a total of 9 volunteers over a 15 day period in 2001.  Not only is the study not current, no reasonable person would come to any logical conclusion on such a small sample.

Mr. Webb describes the study and debunks some of the more popular claims in a new article on his blog.  You may read the details here: http://weightlosspillsanddietsnews.blogspot.com/search?updated-min=2009-11-01T00%3A00%3A00-07%3A00&updated-max=2009-12-01T00%3A00%3A00-08%3A00&max-results=6

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Want to know about weight loss pills and diets, how to relieve depression, lower high blood pressure naturally or lower stress. David Webb and writes about solutions. Read about in-depth honest research and commentary at one of his web sites today.
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