Benefits of Tahitian Noni Juice - Are There Any?

Benefits of Tahitian Noni Juice - Are There Any?
Benefits of Tahitian Noni Juice are in the news. Is there any truth behind these reports? Not in my opinion. I say it’s all hype.

“You are wrong!” disagrees an anonymous Noni email to me. “The American Heart Association just did a research study that proved Noni juice lowered cholesterol and triglycerides,” they continue. “Get your research facts straight.”

Okay, let’s see if we can get the research facts “straight.”

First Fact: the American Heart Association (AHA) did not do a noni research study. It was done by Dr. Mian-Ying Wang, a member of the Tahitian Noni International (TNI) advisory board. Dr. Wang has received close to a million dollars in grants from TNI over the last couple of years. She is hardly what you would call an independent, objective researcher.

Medline Plus, a service of the National Institutes of Health, points out that “the small study – like most others looking at the (Noni) product – was funded by the maker of the juice.” And any study funded by TNI that says Noni is good for you holds about as much credibility as a study funded by Phillip Morris that says smoking is harmless.

Second Fact: the study proves nothing. It only shows that Noni knows how to publicize itself. It was not peer-reviewed or published in a respectable scientific journal. Unless research goes through the rigorous peer-review process, it can only be considered preliminary. Even Dr. Wang was cautious. She qualified her study by saying Noni “may” be beneficial. Of course, then again, it may not.

Third Fact: the study was simply one of over 300 poster presentations at a recent AHA symposium in Phoenix. And, according to a recent report published by the Pediatric Academic Society, the vast majority of poster presentations never make it through the peer-review process to ever get published in a respectable journal.

And to top it off, the AHA stands behind this strong disclaimer: “Statements and conclusions of study authors that are presented at American Heart Association scientific meetings are solely those of the study authors…. The American Heart Association makes no representation or warranty as to their accuracy or reliability.” In other words, the AHA takes no responsibility for this “study.” It’s just more slick Tahitian Noni marketing.

There you go. I think we’ve got the “research facts straight!” But that won’t stop my anonymous e-mailer and hundreds of other Noni distributors from flooding the internet with false and misleading claims about the curative powers of their sugar water. And do you think I’ll get a “straight” apology? It’s highly doubtful.

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Note: The information contained on this website is not intended to be prescriptive. Any attempt to diagnose or treat an illness should come under the direction of a physician who is familiar with nutritional therapy.




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