2 réponses
Hello,
I couldn't find any manual for the Lyfanoe bracelet, but it seems like it might be a scam! Here are a few sources (in English):
https://malwaretips.com/blogs/is-the-lyfanoe-bracelet-a-scam-the-truth-behind-the-detox-bracelet/
https://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/threads/lyfanog-detox-wristband.209062/
https://wellaholic.com/blog/lyfanoe-detox-wristband/
Good evening,
There is nothing worse than making money off the backs of sick people by making them believe in wonders.
Just by looking at their site https://airylives.com/products/frsh-1 it quickly becomes clear that it's a nice scam.
Unfortunately for you, you've been taken in.
Sincerely.
Hello,
One wonders even why the question is being asked and by what incantatory magic an ionized bracelet or something of that nature could have any effectiveness in weight loss, detoxification, or whatever we like.
In a 1.0 time, bracelets made of copper were sold to those under 20 for arthritis, and more recently, amber necklaces for teething (which in principle are banned because the only probable effect is the risk of strangulation).
Generally speaking, to each their own profession and the cows will be well cared for: we are 100% sure that such a therapeutic "sold" on social networks by people who have no expertise in it is null and void, because otherwise, after clinical trials, the medical community would have used it, and it would have been incorporated into the official circuit.
In the case that interests us, the only risk is to make your wallet lighter, but we must not lose sight of the potential risks of charlatan therapy; I mentioned the amber necklaces, but quite regularly and still recently, a number of Asian plants that are also "slimming" without any proof to support them and present in certain "dietary supplements," yet banned from the official circuit, have caused deaths from fulminant hepatitis.