Is detoxing a myth?

January 5th, 20152:16 am @

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After a few ‘what do you think about this?’ emails and messages from our community we thought we should respond to the article in the Guardian last week about Detox being a myth.

Agreed, right now, there is no scientific evidence to support that detox really works. Nor is there for acupuncture, osteopathy or colon hydrotherapy.  But we know they work.

The problem is the industries that fund the research don’t want to prove that natural cures work.  There’s no money in it for them.

The Cambridge English dictionary defines ‘detox’ as:

a period when you stop taking unhealthy or harmful foods, drinks, or drugs into your body for a period of time, in order to improve your health:

With the OECD projections suggesting that more than two out of three people will be overweight or obese in some OECD countries by 2020 and 8-10% of GP consultations in the UK every day contributing alcohol as a factor  (reported in the Guardian in December) costing billions, we at Studio Australia Barcelona think that any program described as a DETOX that changes people’s habits with regards to the healthy consumption of food, drinks, alcohol, drugs and awareness to their environment for the betterment of their bodies and lives should be regarded as anything but a myth.

Our Detox Guide – A simple way to purify your body at home in 14 days  – works.  It costs a whole 9.95 euros, believe us we are not crooks, disrespectful or profiting from false claims as Mr Edzard Ernst suggests.  It is a culmination of many years of experience and it teaches and helps people who have never detoxed before to change their daily habits around food, exercise, the way the body eliminates toxins and how we can be empowered to maintain a healthy weight and lifestyle by what we put in our mouths.

Ready to start Nat’s February detox today?

References:

http://www.oecd.org/health/49716427.pdf

http://www.theguardian.com/healthcare-network/2014/dec/12/alcoholrelated-deaths-cost-nhs