Official Disclaimer: The statements made regarding any products on our site have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. All information presented here is not meant as a substitute for or alternative to information from health care practitioners. Please consult your health care professional about potential interactions or other possible complications before using any product. The Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act requires this notice.
Informal side note:
Please note that even if there was anything we sold that could cure anything, we wouldn’t be able to say it, because currently in the United States, the perception and adopted legal standard is that only a drug can cure anything. That’s the law.
For example, even if Vitamin C can cure scurvy, under the current guidelines no one can say it. Not us or anyone else.
That’s the model in place here in the United States in America. So ironically, even if the FDA regularly approves drugs fast tracked through the approval system by usury fees paid by pharmaceutical companies, and advertised to people directly through their television sets and radios, or prescribed by doctors that create more potentially lethal side effects than the disorder or disease they’re attempting to treat or address, that is completely legal. Another example is if it turns them into addicts, even under prescribed use, as is the case in the current opiate crisis, that is also completely and totally legal and acceptable under current FDA and alopathic medical guidelines.
This is not a critique of the FDA by any means. This is meant only as an informal overview for those unfamiliar with the laws in the United States as they currently exist regarding curative statements and DSHEA guidelines for supplements and all non-drugs, and the reasoning for the manner in which they must be phrased.