Free Health Ideas, Daily Health Tips, and the Optimal Healthy Lifestyle, BBC

Dr. Oz and Belly Fat Boosters: The Drug Lord of Supplements

It’s a constant problem with Dr. Oz…

He behaves and sounds like a ‘drug lord’ and prescribes supplements as if they were drugs.

Dr. Oz and Belly Fat Boosters

I find it to be irresponsible. In 35 years, I have never tested very many supplements that do as much as Dr. Oz claims they will do. He is misleading people and he needs to take a step back to re-evaluate his role in bringing coherent information to the attention of the public.

If you are going to act on the advice given by this individual, then at least get a second opinion with someone who uses EAV testing equipment. I think you may be surprised by the results.

It’s as if he is setting you up with a buffet of supplements with 500 mg. here and 100 mg. there…twice a day for this and three times a day for that. It gives nutritional science a bad name…

Before you take DHEA (7 keto) and the other belly fat busters mentioned on the show today, you need to do more to research one or the other for yourself, rather than going into uncharted territory blind.

No one in their right mind takes saffron or caraway seeds as a supplement…they cook with these substances. Even the supplement derived from a plant in the mint family is better consumed as a plant – not a pill.

If I were to take one day’s worth of supplements that Dr. Oz says will do so much for me – selling it like a used car salesman – I would be bloated, filled with gas, and experiencing digestive upset.

Deepak Chopra is on his way to catching up with Dr. oz in the bad reputation department. He approaches Adaptogens like a pharmaceutical, too. He treats meditation as a cure for the physical dimension before admitting that until you ‘change your mind’, your body will not heal, No number of minutes and breaths a day or Sanskrit mantras will do the work that Consciousness must do. he’s not giving you the full picture, most likely because he doesn’t possess it himself. His methods are but a distraction…

Later Dr. Oz finished his day’s deal-making by suggesting that you eat a cereal for breakfast, a lunch with sauerkraut, and some miso soup.

The sauerkraut and other fermented foods are OK, but never settle for instant miso soup as oz implied…it’s not the same. You make miso soup from miso paste and water, adding scallions, tofu, and other healthy ingredients as you wish. Dr. Oz seems to think that there is added salt, but that’s not true. Does he even drink miso soup?

By the way…Boswellia for joint health is better when used in the form of an Essential Oil, not a supplement. But it would take more than an MD behind your name to know that!

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