Consumer Reports Diet Pills
Consumer reports on diet pills are particularly important because retail diet pills are classified as 'supplements' and not medication, which means that they are not subject to rigorous US drug testing laws.
In all likelihood, retail diet pills will produce no more than short-term weight-loss as a result of reduced appetite and accelerated metabolism. They are no long-term solution to weight problems, and so can easily be abused over long periods of time. This is particularly worrying when we consider that teenage girls are the most common purchasers of these drugs.
Consumer reports on diet pills are essential research because they collate and present all the information that is so urgently needed and inexplicably missing from official statistics. The consumer reports assess the retail diet drugs that are commonly available, and present as much information as possible about success rates, potential side-effects, the ways in which the drugs can be useful and any clinical trials which have been conducted.
Diet pills are available extremely cheaply - and even cheaper when bought online - but consumer reports on diet pills can give an idea of whether even a small amount of money would be wasted on these drugs!
Prescription diet pills - such as Phentermine and Meridia - are bound by US drug laws and, as such, must be approved by the Food and Drug Administration. A drug which has not been thoroughly tested - or which contains potentially dangerous ingredients - will not be approved by the FDA and will be illegal if sold in the US. Equally, drugs which have no impact or do not meet the claims made by the producers will not be approved for sale.
In the case of retail diet drugs, there is no official evaluation of the product. The drugs may have little or no impact, they may produce distressing side-effects and could even be dangerous. As a result of this lack of evaluation, many retailers make claims to speedy, long-lasting and incredible results - and provide little or no information in the packaging.