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General Health & Fitness
Nutrition and Supplements
Safety and efficacy of supplements.
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<blockquote data-quote="Blackhawk" data-source="post: 124017" data-attributes="member: 16042"><p>Reviews are inherently not factual unless based upon some kind of scientific/clinical/measurable research.</p><p></p><p>"I feel better" is an inherently subjective statement. it is not factual. There is no accounting for what else a person may have done, their other health circumstances, how well they sleep or are under stress etc etc including placebo effect that may have helped someone feel better when they think it was from the supplement.</p><p></p><p>"I had my blood level of DHEA measured at 64 before treatment, then at 356 after taking 25mg every day" (as long as the info is correct) is a factual review.</p><p></p><p>How many Amazon reviews are like the latter?</p><p></p><p>What other criteria qualify as "factual"?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Blackhawk, post: 124017, member: 16042"] Reviews are inherently not factual unless based upon some kind of scientific/clinical/measurable research. "I feel better" is an inherently subjective statement. it is not factual. There is no accounting for what else a person may have done, their other health circumstances, how well they sleep or are under stress etc etc including placebo effect that may have helped someone feel better when they think it was from the supplement. "I had my blood level of DHEA measured at 64 before treatment, then at 356 after taking 25mg every day" (as long as the info is correct) is a factual review. How many Amazon reviews are like the latter? What other criteria qualify as "factual"? [/QUOTE]
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General Health & Fitness
Nutrition and Supplements
Safety and efficacy of supplements.
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