Next, we have an acupuncture mat that makes some truly, uh, impressive claimspic.twitter.com/3vv6xwtIfa
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Next, we have an acupuncture mat that makes some truly, uh, impressive claimspic.twitter.com/3vv6xwtIfa
Then...magnetic healing spandex gloves None of this makes any sense whatsoever Also, lol at the use of "optimum magnetic field"pic.twitter.com/HUQvMX9Rmc
And last but certainly not least, a acupressure mat that claims to treat everything from high blood pressure to diabetes! This is where it goes from fun and silly to dangerouspic.twitter.com/3CEMG6ZWFF
The thing is, every one of these products is making a specific medical claim Some of them are innocuous, like "helps with weight loss" Some are more problematic, like "treats diabetes" But ALL of them are - as far as I can tell - totally unsupported
These are medical devices, being sold to consumers who will expect them to work medically Except, there's no evidence that they do or will
Also look at the nonsense @AliceEmmaLouise @cherryblack
Wow if this is all it takes sign me up!
I want to know if the hidden dot point is cures cancer!
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