Diet Defense
Diet Defense gives you an all-natural formula designed to give you quick and effective weight loss results, fighting an overactive appetite, empty stomach feeling, and stress & excess eating.
It provides therapeutic results as well as overall health. And they claim a superior effect with homeopathic and oligotherapeutic complexes.
About Diet Defense
Diet Defense stresses the safe and yet effective. They talk about therapies that most don’t understand. Nobody can really understand oligotherapeutic approaches, as it does not seem to exist outside of Diet Defense.
Homeopathy has been popularly known. But it is not nearly as ”accepted” and recognized by the FDA as they would have you believe. It is definitely not FDA approved. But what does this all mean?
How Does Diet Defense Work?
Diet Defense ingredients include Abies Canadensis, Anacardium Orientale, Argentum Metallicum, Adrenocorticotropin Hormone, Hypothalamus, Ignatia Amara, Lycopodium Clavatum, Phosphorus, Pituitarum, Sabadilla, Staphysagria, Sulphur, Thyroidinum, Veratrum Album.
Diet Defense uses a blend of ingredients that they say provide results with homeopathic medicine. But we’ve individually researched each one of these ingredients.
They are said to reduce stress and anxiety, work as anti-bacterials and antiseptics, etc. They do everything it seems but suppress appetite or cravings. There is one that is specifically meant to increase appetite and fight malnutrition.
And even if all of this were not true, they use other self-defeating practices. They use homeopathy. SO as harmful as some of these ingredients can be, being used in chemical detergents and other approaches, they do not have the clinically proven anything. These ingredients aren’t clinically proven anyway. But homeopathic medicine dilutes it down to a water base and nothing but.
Conclusion
Diet Defense makes claims that they cannot support. None of this is particularly surprising. But we would hope for better. With Diet Defense, all you see is a scam that happens to have pretty words and a nice bottle. It seems easy. But generally, when something seems to be too good to be true, it is.
