![]() There are countless products on the market that claim they can help you “burn calories, boost metabolism, and increase energy levels.” Claim 4: “Burn calories, boost metabolism, increase energy levels” You might lose fat if you’re eating a healthier diet and exercising whilst drinking the teas, but the results would mostly be due to your change in lifestyle over the teas.įor more information on this, please read my articles on healthy body fat and permanent fat loss. Mainly in the form of water and feces.Ĭan Skinny Teatox cause you to “lose fat?” Unlikely. Unfortunately, the bathroom scale gives you absolutely no indication if you’re losing fat, muscle, water, or anything else for that matter.īottom line: Can Skinny Teatox cause you to “lose weight?” Yes. However, for many people that want to “lose weight,” their expectation is that they would like to reduce body fat from those trouble spots like the hips, thighs, belly, and arms.Īnd one of the quickest methods to check for “weight loss” is the woefully misleading bathroom scale. ![]() I don’t think there is any question that you will “lose weight” if you are drinking teas loaded with laxatives and diuretics. I believe this claim is truthful, but it deviates from what consumers expectations might actually be. If your body’s bowel and bladder movements are normal, then you are naturally “detoxing” and “cleansing” yourself without the need of teas. It’s also important to note that many of the ingredients in Skinny Teatox teas are both laxatives and diuretics. Check out this SBS article on detoxing to read more. Unless you’re eating a steady diet of heavy metals and other known pollutants, probably not. Remember there is no legal or standardised definition for “detox” or “cleanse” in a marketing context, so they can be used any which way a company pleases.Īnd for all this “detox” talk out there, remember your body has its own built-in filters your, liver, lungs, spleen, and kidneys.īut wait, don’t my body’s filters get gunked up with “toxins” and need a good “cleansing?” To me, this sounds like similar marketing jargon that goes hand in hand with “detox.” If you don’t know specifically which toxins were talking about, how much or how many are in your body before you start drinking the tea, and you don’t have a measure after you’ve drunk the tea, then how do you know it’s “detoxifying” you? Claim 2: “Cleanse”įollowing on from “detox” above, Skinny Teatox claims their teas will “cleanse” you too. How can you KNOW if the tea is actually working? Are we talking about hexavalent chromium? Lead? Mercury? What’s the story? “Detox” is the primary marketing claim found across the Skinny Teatox website. But nowhere on the website did I find any mention of specifically WHICH “toxins” the tea actually “detoxifies.” Skinny Teatox makes explicit claims on its website that the product can not only “detoxify” and “cleanse” you but will also cause you to “lose weight, burn calories, increase your energy levels, and keep your appetite in check.”īut are these claims truthful and can the product actually deliver? Claim 1: “Detoxify” Drugs used for real detoxification are not ingredients in a smoothie. ![]() Real detoxification is provided in hospitals under life-threatening circumstances - usually when there are dangerous levels of drugs, alcohol, or other poisons in the body. Real detoxification isn’t ordered from a menu at a juice bar, or assembled from supplies in your pantry. It is a fake treatment for a fake condition. “Detox” is a legitimate medical term that has been co-opted to sell useless products and services. Scott Gavura eloquently provides a real definition for detox in a recent article on Science-Based Medicine: Popularised by questionable internet personalities such as self-styled toxin-hunter Vani Hari (aka Food Babe), the term “detox” has been recklessly bandied around with little consideration for accuracy of use – and frankly, it’s terrifying consumers.īut if you buy into the hype, then you are fat, tired, and unhealthy because “dangerous toxins” have accumulated in your body. What is “detox” and why is it plastered all over different products these days? Before we get into Skinny Teatox’s specific marketing claims, it’s important to look at the marketing juggernaut that is the word “detox.” ![]()
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