The Best HGH Supplements

Lisa Wells, RN

Best HGH Supplements

By now you've probably seen the many websites that list what they feel are the best HGH supplements. They claim to have compared and rated various products, including some that masquerade as consumer advocate sites.

Such sites are not unbiased and they have done absolutely no legitimate clinical studies to measure the effectiveness of different supplements. They are merely websites that are being used to try to make money. Some are built by sellers as a way to help them sell their own products. Others make money by showing advertisements.

If you are wanting to know which HGH product to take look for proper clinical studies that measured effectiveness.
Check our ProBLEN Clinical Study Results Here!


They Are Not Consumer Advocates!

The owners of such websites want their visitors to believe what they say, and they are correct because some are choosing a product based solely on their fake product ratings and recommendations.

They want their sites to appear to be a sort of independent HGH Consumer Reports. They want you to believe that some unbiased company or person that doesn't make any money selling products or showing ads decided to spend their money to somehow compare and rate different products and then pay for a website and advertising on search engines so you can find their site so they can do you the favor of telling you which product you should buy!

Such websites have no connections to the well known and unbiased Consumers Reports magazine that accepts no advertising but is supported by millions of subscribers and newsstand buyers. They are owned by product sellers or by advertisers whom the sellers must pay in order to have their products listed with a rating and with a link to their own websites, and the more they pay the higher their products will be rated. I know this to be true because I have been approached by such sites and they offered to give our products a great rating if we paid for it!

ProBLEN HGH Supplements

Although we would never pay any websites for ratings there are some sites that claim to have reviewed and rated our ProBLEN products. Of course since we haven't paid them they didn't give our products the best ratings!

If they know anything about our products they will know that, according to legitimate independent randomized double-blind placebo-controlled IGF-1 clinical studies that measure the increase of IGF-1 in the blood of test subjects during clinical trials our HGH formula raised the IGF-1 levels the highest.

PLEASE NOTE: The growth factor IGF-1 can be used to measure growth hormone in the body of adults because it remains more stable in the blood than growth hormone. Once released HGH remains in the blood for only a couple of minutes. It is quickly taken in by the liver, which then releases IGF-1.

Of course they don't mention our independent clinical study results in their ratings. They would prefer that you didn't know that real clinical studies exist because once you learn that proper clinical studies are the only legitimate and medically accepted way to measure the effectiveness of any medication or supplement that aims to increase hormones you will see their ratings for what they are, only sales hype.

Let Your Common Sense Be Your Guide

The sites that purport to tell you which HGH supplements are most effective seem to be rating growth hormone supplements the way Consumer Reports rates washing machines. Supplements that are ingested into the body cannot be rated the way you would rate a common household item. To measure the true effectiveness of any health product proper clinical studies need to be done to see how the product works for a group of test subjects over a period of time.

Most companies/sellers have no legitimate clinical studies to show that their HGH product is really ranked #1 for effectiveness which is the reason for all the sites that list what they claim are the best supplements. By building such a site sellers are able to claim their product was ranked #1 by some comparison done by some unnamed source.

The people who own these sites have done no clinical studies and they are not qualified to do any such studies. They just think they can outsmart you with their hyped up product reviews, ratings, and rankings!

How Do They Rank HGH Supplements?

Now lets consider that the owners of such sites claim they have compared and rated different products but they don't tell you how they did this.

There are now numerous products on the market. Proper comparisons would be very expensive and would require months of preparation and then years of actual "comparing". Even if they compared only five products the cost and time required would be extensive. Proper comparisons would require that each product be compared under the same exact guidelines and circumstances.

Also, any sort of comparison would not be seen as legitimate if it did not include measurements such as IGF-1 blood levels because it would not contain any solid evidence. The comparisons would only be based upon the different test subject's perception of their benefits and since every person has a different perception any such comparison could not properly reflect the true effectiveness of the products compared.

Just think about it, how did they come up with the ratings they gave the various supplements?

What did they do, just ask people who have taken different HGH products how they liked them? How could they find those people? The only people they would know about are their own customers. I am sure the sellers of the other products did not hand over their list of customer names, phone numbers, or emails so a competitor could contact them.

Surely they wouldn't allow anyone who visits their website to write a product review since anyone can write anything, whether they have taken the product or not, and of course sellers would be able to write reviews on their own products and also on their competitor's products! Surely this is not the way they came up with their ratings.

Lets say they somehow did obtain the contact information of people who have tried different products and they asked each person how they liked the products. Is that all there is to their comparisons and ratings? What if the person didn't take a product as directed? Obviously they would not have received good results and so they may give that product a poor rating, but no product can be effective if it is not taken correctly.

Since the contact information of people who have tried different products probably didn't magically fall into their hands lets say the owners of these websites did the comparisons and ratings themselves.

What could they do, buy one bottle of each product and have one person try each one and then ask that person which he liked best? That's not very scientific is it? They could not have one person take one product and another person take a different one due to the difference in people's bodies, their health, their perceptions as I mentioned above, and the way they would take the product.

To compare different products, first of all, the study would need to be done independently and not be done by anyone who stands to gain financially. Each person in the study would have to take all the products one at a time for several months and the study would have to be controlled and monitored to make sure the person took each product exactly as directed.

The person could not know which product he was taking and he possibly would take a placebo without knowing it to make sure he was not just receiving placebo effects. Otherwise, the studies would not be fair and accurate.

Most importantly, blood measurements of the amount of human growth hormone in the body would need to be done just before the study started, and again at the end of the study. Such a comparison would take several years to complete because each person would have to wait several months in between taking each product to let the effects of the previous product wear off.

Of course the people who own the product rating websites won't give you any specifics about how their comparisons were done or how they came up with their ratings because it is all just hype!

It would be much easier to have proper independent randomized double-blind placebo-controlled IGF-1 clinical studies done on their own product. Perhaps they are afraid of what legitimate clinical studies would show?

They won't have their own product properly tested with clinical studies, which is the only medically accepted method of evaluating the effectiveness of pharmaceuticals and health supplements, yet they expect you to believe that they have somehow had many different ones compared and rated.

So a more believable explanation regarding the websites that list the best HGH supplements is this; sellers have made these web pages to help them sell their own products. They want their web page that ranks supplements to appear independent or to appear to be a news related web page so visitors will believe that some independent source has compared the different products and chose theirs as best.

These days anyone can purchase a website domain name for about $20 a year or less and they can pay a virtual hosting company about $4.95 per month or even less so such sites are really a very cheap way to advertise.

Evidence That Exposes Sites That List the Best HGH Supplements

One way to know who owns a certain consumer-like product rating site is to compare the "whois" (who owns the site) for that site and the main website of the product they say rates highest.

According to whois, a very highly advertised HGH product consumer ratings website is owned by the same company who owns the product they rate #1!

If the product rating website belongs to an advertiser; someone who is making money by advertising the products of others, look for a link called "advertising", or something similar on his page.

One such site shows an advertising link right at the top of his home page!

Can you believe this? To me this means the site owner believes his visitors don't realize what he is doing so he can place his advertising link right at the top of his pages for all to see. He does this so that other sellers can easily reach him if they decide they wish to pay him to list their products and give them a make-believe rating, and this arrangement includes a link to the seller's own website.

Some Are Owned By Sellers or MLM Distributors

As stated above, the most advertised HGH product rating website is owned by the same company who owns the product they rate #1.

To know if the product rating website is owned by a distributor just click on the link of the product with the highest rating. This will take you to his other website where he sells that product.

Also, when you click on a product link you can pay attention to that link's URL (the web page address that the link will take you to) in your browser address bar. If the product's web page address contains numbers or random letters, this is his distributor number that gives him the credit for your sale.

Others Just Want To Make Money With Google Adsense

Lastly, there are some people who have made HGH product rating websites and they make a different page for each product. They write a short so-called review so they can stuff each page with keywords so it will hopefully be found on search engines whenever someone searches for that particular product.

Besides their review of the product, on each web page you will also find Google Adsense or Bing paid ads all up and down both sides of the page and/or on the top and/or bottom of the page. Every time someone clicks on any of those ads the owner of that web page makes money.

People who make pages such as these are using them just to make money on the ads they show.

False Claims About Clinical Studies

Please keep in mind that sellers also know how important clinical studies proving effectiveness are so even though their product has had no legitimate clinical studies they may claim that it has.

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