Frutaiga is a real product and the active ingredients have a long history of generating dramatic health benefits. The plants in Frutaiga are quite possibly the most researched botanicals in history. Over 3,000 research studies on over 500,000 humans, conducted by 1200 Russian scientists over the course of 45 years yielded the basis of our formula. That formula is clinically proven and in use in many countries today.
If you are using or selling any of the juices (Noni, Xango, Goji, Monavie, Fruta Vida, Frequensea etc.) then please open your mind and understand the real issues on nutriceuticals and why "the juices" have so negatively impacted the nutritional industry's reputation and why research scientists and credentialed, ethical nutritional formulators and researchers deride and are disgusted by the juice companies claims and the "substantiation" they present.
Any person getting health benefits from any of the juices will be absolutely astounded at the benefits they will get from taking Frutaiga which is hundreds (if not thousands) of times more potent than any of the juices. As with any medicine or nutritional, you need to be taking enough of the active ingredient each day to affect your size body. The daily dose of Frutaiga has enough active ingredients to do so, the juices do not. This is a simple matter of researched scientific fact versus claims and testimonials from hopefully impartial users or worse yet, credibility lent by MDs or PHDs paid to shill for a product or who own or are part of the company. Product credibility and efficacy come from proven scientific research studies, any other source lacks credibility.
Frutaiga IS NOT a juice, it only uses juice as the carrier for a guaranteed potency mixture of 100% pure, active ingredients called Rosalean. Even the juice carrier used in Frutaiga has more anti-oxidant power than the juice products. There are 300mg of Rosalean (all active ingredient) in each ounce of Frutaiga. In comparison, according to independent laboratory results (the juice companies refuse to list the amount of active ingredients in their product), the juices don't even have 15mg of active ingredients in their entire bottle. Their quoted studies indicate 400mg to 800mg per day of active ingredient was used to get results.
It is a dead give away that a product is mainly hype when a company refuses to state the amount of active ingredients in an ounce or the entire bottle. When companies talk about using the "entire fruit" or focuses on "cellular absorbtion" and use other phrases that sound good and convincing but ignore the real world of needing to have enough active ingredient in the product to produce benefits, then they are out of the realm of science and product efficacy and all their claims evaporate in the light of reason.
It is the active ingredients of the botanical or phyto-plankton that provides the benefit, not the whole plant or a juice made with pulp. There is such a tiny amount of active ingredient in the whole plant that you physically could not eat enough of the plant (including plankton) to achieve sufficient ingestion of active ingredient to appreciably benefit the human body. This is the heart of the problem and why those products have no credibility in the scientific community and also why the vast majority of people who try those products do not experience any benefit and stop taking the product.
Eventually the FDA will step in and clean up this ugly "smoke and mirrors" part of the nutritional industry. Frutaiga will be one of the very few companies left standing when this happens. If the product you are using or selling is not touting their amount of active ingredients per serving you should be VERY worried.
I have met people who have gotten health benefits from "the juices". Not many, but some, and I believe them. The juices do have pretty good anti-oxidant values although what those companies quote are test tube values, not the in situ anti-oxidant values per "functional anti-oxidants". The labs that have tested and supplied those anti-oxidant values quoted by "the juices" have issued public disclaimers on those results being marketed so heavily and state that test tube ORAC and HORAC scores do not in any way reflect how well the product's anti-oxidants work in the human body. Again, more "smoke and mirrors" is evidence the product is hype more than real. Placebo effect and monetary gain are other reasons ineffective products can produce benefits in humans.
Some companies claim their inclusion in the PDR supports their claims of being an efficacious product which is a complete lie. The PDR is a "pay for inclusion" list of products used by the medical industry and does not validate any product, it is merely a product compendium similar to the Sweets catalog used by the construction industry.
Take a good, hard look at the products you are taking or selling and please don't leave your ethics or reasoning ability at the door. Use and sell "real" products, not hype. The nutritional industry can help people attain better health and longevity while affording companies and reps an excellent income and lifestyle. I look forward to your questions and to the results you get from taking Frutaiga.
If you are using or selling any of the juices (Noni, Xango, Goji, Monavie, Fruta Vida, Frequensea etc.) then please open your mind and understand the real issues on nutriceuticals and why "the juices" have so negatively impacted the nutritional industry's reputation and why research scientists and credentialed, ethical nutritional formulators and researchers deride and are disgusted by the juice companies claims and the "substantiation" they present.
Any person getting health benefits from any of the juices will be absolutely astounded at the benefits they will get from taking Frutaiga which is hundreds (if not thousands) of times more potent than any of the juices. As with any medicine or nutritional, you need to be taking enough of the active ingredient each day to affect your size body. The daily dose of Frutaiga has enough active ingredients to do so, the juices do not. This is a simple matter of researched scientific fact versus claims and testimonials from hopefully impartial users or worse yet, credibility lent by MDs or PHDs paid to shill for a product or who own or are part of the company. Product credibility and efficacy come from proven scientific research studies, any other source lacks credibility.
Frutaiga IS NOT a juice, it only uses juice as the carrier for a guaranteed potency mixture of 100% pure, active ingredients called Rosalean. Even the juice carrier used in Frutaiga has more anti-oxidant power than the juice products. There are 300mg of Rosalean (all active ingredient) in each ounce of Frutaiga. In comparison, according to independent laboratory results (the juice companies refuse to list the amount of active ingredients in their product), the juices don't even have 15mg of active ingredients in their entire bottle. Their quoted studies indicate 400mg to 800mg per day of active ingredient was used to get results.
It is a dead give away that a product is mainly hype when a company refuses to state the amount of active ingredients in an ounce or the entire bottle. When companies talk about using the "entire fruit" or focuses on "cellular absorbtion" and use other phrases that sound good and convincing but ignore the real world of needing to have enough active ingredient in the product to produce benefits, then they are out of the realm of science and product efficacy and all their claims evaporate in the light of reason.
It is the active ingredients of the botanical or phyto-plankton that provides the benefit, not the whole plant or a juice made with pulp. There is such a tiny amount of active ingredient in the whole plant that you physically could not eat enough of the plant (including plankton) to achieve sufficient ingestion of active ingredient to appreciably benefit the human body. This is the heart of the problem and why those products have no credibility in the scientific community and also why the vast majority of people who try those products do not experience any benefit and stop taking the product.
Eventually the FDA will step in and clean up this ugly "smoke and mirrors" part of the nutritional industry. Frutaiga will be one of the very few companies left standing when this happens. If the product you are using or selling is not touting their amount of active ingredients per serving you should be VERY worried.
I have met people who have gotten health benefits from "the juices". Not many, but some, and I believe them. The juices do have pretty good anti-oxidant values although what those companies quote are test tube values, not the in situ anti-oxidant values per "functional anti-oxidants". The labs that have tested and supplied those anti-oxidant values quoted by "the juices" have issued public disclaimers on those results being marketed so heavily and state that test tube ORAC and HORAC scores do not in any way reflect how well the product's anti-oxidants work in the human body. Again, more "smoke and mirrors" is evidence the product is hype more than real. Placebo effect and monetary gain are other reasons ineffective products can produce benefits in humans.
Some companies claim their inclusion in the PDR supports their claims of being an efficacious product which is a complete lie. The PDR is a "pay for inclusion" list of products used by the medical industry and does not validate any product, it is merely a product compendium similar to the Sweets catalog used by the construction industry.
Take a good, hard look at the products you are taking or selling and please don't leave your ethics or reasoning ability at the door. Use and sell "real" products, not hype. The nutritional industry can help people attain better health and longevity while affording companies and reps an excellent income and lifestyle. I look forward to your questions and to the results you get from taking Frutaiga.
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