The BEST DEAL ON HCG DROPS For February 2012
(Get 2 bottles for just $79.00, that's only $39.50 per bottle!)

The buzz about HCG weight loss never seems to die down. On the one hand, you have hundreds of successful dieters raving about the spectacular weight loss successes they experienced with the HCG diet. On the other hand, you have naysayers loudly proclaiming its dangers, labeling it a fraud, and warning people against using HCG for weight loss.
The HCG diet was developed by Dr. A. T. W. Simeons in the 1950s and was tested extensively on hundreds of patients in his clinic in the Salvator Mundi Hospital in Rome, before he published his findings on obesity in scientific journals as well as in his booklet, “Pounds and Inches.” This “new approach to obesity” was controversial from the very beginning, but became even more so when Kevin Trudeau wrote about it in his book, “The Weight Loss Cure” in 2007. This brought renewed attention on the diet and generated a new generation of loyal followers and loud critics in equal numbers.
Quite recently, the HCG diet was featured on the iconic Dr. Oz show to evaluate its claims. To the show’s credit, he presented the diet in detail and provided feedback from both believers and naysayers. He had successful and failed dieters share about their experiences and had doctors on both side of the fence who each pointed out the benefits and the dangers of taking HCG for weight loss.
The usual concerns focused on the possible side effects of taking HCG injections and the inherent issues in doing a very low calorie diet. According to the naysayers, taking HCG is too risky and has been shown to be ineffective in causing weight loss. Their conclusion is that any weight loss from HCG is completely due to the placebo effect and the prescribed very low calorie diet. This conclusion was of course disputed by dieters who experienced spectacular success taking HCG weight loss drops largely without experiencing hunger or major side effects.
Dr. Oz’s concluding remarks on HCG surprised both critics and believers with his unexpectedly positive verdict that the HCG diet clearly works for some people and that it is worth investigating. This was such a surprise, in the face of the long and detailed arguments from experts against HCG because there has been no scientific evidence that it causes weight loss. Dr. Oz did echo this lack of published evidence for using HCG for loss, but also highlighted the evidence from thousands of dieters for whom the diet produced results and concluded that looking more closely at the HCG diet phenomenon might yield useful results in the cause against obesity.
The truth is that the controversies surrounding HCG have not been able to deter thousands of dieters from succeeding with their weight loss goals. The internet is full of these success stories, which are effectively accompanied by before and after pictures clearly showing significant weight loss. The critics’ accusation that the HCG diet is backed only by anecdotal evidence actually speaks volumes for the efficacy of HCG. If the choice is between believing the non-evidence argument of HCG critics and believing the overwhelming anecdotal evidence of thousands of successful dieters, then it is easy to see dieters keep choosing HCG drops for weight loss success.
(Get 2 bottles for just $79.00, that's only $39.50 per bottle!)
