News you may be able to use...
I happened to see a Truvada commercial on TV today for the first time. All about HIV prevention. Worth a look, I think. Like I implied, this is this the first time I have heard of this pill.
[URL]https://www.truvada.com/?utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=2018[/URL]+Branded+Commercial+Support_West_EVG&utm_content=Truvada+Commercial_Exact&utm_term=truvada+commercial&moc=5601000006&utm_source=google&gclid=EAIaIQobChMI67 Lx9 PeM3 AIVBavsCh1-ngUQEAAYASAAEgKPJPD_BwE&gclsrc=aw. Ds.
[URL]https://www.fiercepharma.com/marketing/gilead-takes-hiv-prevention-message-to-tv-pushes-prep-awareness-hipster-ad[/URL]
Supplements (Vasosport), Herbs, Wellness.
Many forms of "Wellness" have no evidence basis despite claims. Is that wrong? No, as long as it's not harmful, but just know that 99% of what the wellness industry pushes may make you feel good but has NO actual medical benefit. This goes for most special diets, detox cleanses, much of the chiropractic care provided, massages, most vitamins and supplements, essential oils, I could go on and on. Counter this with physician supervised programs that actually are based on scientific evidence and are validated via published peer reviewed clinical trials. Bottom line- if it makes you feel good and you realize that it may not actually benefit you and isn't harmful, then it may be ok, just beware of false claims.