There appears to be no reliable information about Bioactive Liver Rejuvenix on the company website about this product. Whilst Bioactive makes many claims about what the product is supposed to do, cure 127 ailments, no ingredients are listed and there are no details about clinical trials.
The company’s address and phone number are given on the web page but there are allegations that that these might not be real. Likewise, the endorsing physician, Dr Patricia Lacoste, cannot be contacted.
What is interesting is that about a quarter of the space on Bioactive’s web page is devoted to getting your orders and billing information.
The product is also not endorsed by USP (United States Pharmacopeia) which is a non-governmental, official public standards-setting authority for prescription and over-the-counter medicines and other healthcare products manufactured or sold in the United States. The UK MHRA (Medicines and Healthcare Regulatory Authority) has no reference to this product either.
It is difficult not to be suspicious about a company that provides no official information about its product. A press release exists but contains nothing informative - it is filled with advertisements. The company also does not seem to be taking any steps to counteract the many claims that the product is a scam, instead, relying purely on testimonials from the public.
Whether the testimonials are real or fake is difficult to know. No doubt, some people may have felt that the product was working for them but whether this was down to the so-called ‘placebo effect’ is hard to tell until some real peer-reviewed studies are produced to verify how and why the product works.
The company’s address and phone number are given on the web page but there are allegations that that these might not be real. Likewise, the endorsing physician, Dr Patricia Lacoste, cannot be contacted.
What is interesting is that about a quarter of the space on Bioactive’s web page is devoted to getting your orders and billing information.
The product is also not endorsed by USP (United States Pharmacopeia) which is a non-governmental, official public standards-setting authority for prescription and over-the-counter medicines and other healthcare products manufactured or sold in the United States. The UK MHRA (Medicines and Healthcare Regulatory Authority) has no reference to this product either.
It is difficult not to be suspicious about a company that provides no official information about its product. A press release exists but contains nothing informative - it is filled with advertisements. The company also does not seem to be taking any steps to counteract the many claims that the product is a scam, instead, relying purely on testimonials from the public.
Whether the testimonials are real or fake is difficult to know. No doubt, some people may have felt that the product was working for them but whether this was down to the so-called ‘placebo effect’ is hard to tell until some real peer-reviewed studies are produced to verify how and why the product works.