Drink it for three days and you’ll notice the change: zero cholesterol, zero arthritis, zero fatigue.

Drink it for three days and you’ll notice the change: zero cholesterol, zero arthritis, zero fatigue.

That statement is almost certainly an exaggerated health claim.

 

If someone says, “Drink it for three days and you’ll notice the change: zero cholesterol, zero arthritis, zero fatigue,” there are several red flags:

 

“Zero cholesterol” is not realistic after three days from any drink. Cholesterol levels can improve with diet, exercise, or medications, but they do not typically drop to zero—and having zero cholesterol would not be healthy.

“Zero arthritis” is not a credible claim. Arthritis is a medical condition that cannot be eliminated in three days by a beverage.

“Zero fatigue” is also unrealistic. Fatigue can have many causes (sleep, stress, illness, nutrition, medications, etc.), and no drink can guarantee its complete disappearance.

Products marketed with claims like these often rely on testimonials or advertising rather than strong scientific evidence. If you tell me what the drink is (its name or ingredients), I can help evaluate whether there is any evidence behind its claimed benefits.

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