For this reason, prospective hoodia customers are well-advised to be highly discriminating in selecting a specific brand name product.
Amidst all of the hoopla and hype about hoodia there are a scant few truly objective reports on this controversial topic.
One of them is by Cathy Wong who writes on Diet.com and who has no apparent investment in ANY hoodia supplement. Here is the first of two reports by her in altmedicine.about.com.
In the second of these two articles in diet.com, she mentions that another objective hoodia investigator, Mike Adams, has found that around 80% of hoodia products are "counterfeit."
Here is a quote from his article in News Target in which he offers his personal view on the few that are for real:
The supplements that are consistently verified as being genuine hoodia gordonii include the Desert Burn brand, the Hoodoba brand from Strictly Health Corp., and the Hoodia Hoodia brand from Millennium Health. Those three pass on a more consistent basis than the products being distributed in retail, in fact. This is the rare case where the internet is offering better quality and more honest products than you can buy at retail. Even some of the big retail chains selling hoodia weight loss products are selling counterfeit hoodia gordonii. I'm not going to name names, because there aren't enough lawyers in the world to defend me against the onslaught of legal claims that would be unleashed if I did; however, I can tell you I would only buy hoodia online through the sources that I've mentioned, or through any others that consistently pass the certification tests.
You can read his full article here (the first article at the top of the page).
For more information about Desert Burn Hoodia, click on the banner below:


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