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Health product scams are common. What are the common scam traps?
Pay attention to buying health care products. Some scams are very typical. If we take a closer look, we can actually find clues. So, what do you think are the common scams? Let's give you a few representative examples of Bian Xiao, and interested friends can talk together.

First, beware of free traps.

In order to widely publicize health care products, some unscrupulous merchants adopt publicity strategies such as free experience, free trial and free health consultation, just to fool more people into paying attention to products. When the elderly have a free medical examination, these businesses may inform the elderly that they have it? Disease? Need to buy these health care products for treatment and prevention; After the elderly try these products for free, businesses will brag about what other functions these health care products have and try their best to persuade the elderly to buy products.

Second, products that can cure all diseases are not credible.

In the face of some elderly people, some businesses often like to publicize the efficacy of their products in a grandiose way. For example, merchants are likely to amplify the efficacy of health care products, or even reach? Cure all diseases? Although the miraculous effect is really unbelievable to many people, some old people are still easily deceived. Because the elderly, as authorities, have some physical problems and want to find a medicine that can cure diseases, once they encounter such a trap in life, they will easily jump.

Third, hire a child care worker to seduce the elderly.

Some businesses will invite the so-called? Expert? Or? Scholar? Introduce health care products to the public in public? Special curative effect? What's more, some of them are released? Authoritative test report? It looks more credible. In fact, these things are fake, and even so-called experts may be hired by businesses to take care of them. Other businesses will directly instruct some people to pretend to be consumers, and then write some thank-you letters in the name of consumers, creating the illusion that products do have good effects, which will easily attract the elderly.