Supplement Marketing
Cross-source consensus on Supplement Marketing from 2 sources and 14 claims.
2 sources · 14 claims
How it works
Risks & contraindications
Background
Evidence quality
Highlighted claims
- The label 'all natural' has no legal definition and carries no regulatory weight. — ACV Gummies — Are They Actually Healthy?
- The marketing for ACV gummies is built on manipulation rather than evidence. — ACV Gummies — Are They Actually Healthy?
- ACV gummy brands arrange the words 'shark' and 'tank' in product titles to imply Shark Tank endorsement without actually being endorsed. — ACV Gummies — Are They Actually Healthy?
- The Shark Tank show has never endorsed ACV gummy products. — ACV Gummies — Are They Actually Healthy?
- Fat burning claims on ACV gummy products are unsubstantiated and appear without supporting evidence. — ACV Gummies — Are They Actually Healthy?
- The 'all natural' claim on supplement products has no legal definition and carries no regulatory weight. — ACV Gummies — Are They Actually Healthy?
- ACV gummy brands use the words 'shark' and 'tank' in product titles to imply Shark Tank endorsement without having received any. — ACV Gummies — Are They Actually Healthy?
- Fat burning claims appearing in ACV gummy product titles and descriptions are unsubstantiated. — ACV Gummies — Are They Actually Healthy?
- Some ACV gummy sellers on Amazon deliberately omit the full ingredient list to hide sugar content that contradicts their keto and health claims. — ACV Gummies — Are They Actually Healthy?
- The 'Made in USA' label on supplements only means ingredients are bottled in the US, while the actual ingredients typically come from China. — ACV Gummies — Are They Actually Healthy?