Certiphene

Pulling consumers in with a free trial offer that automatically signs you up for an autoship program, Certiphene claims you can achieve any 30 day weight loss goal and boost your muscle mass at the same time. They focus on the idea that they use more hoodia than Trimspa and more chromium picolinate than Hydroxycut.
Now this all sounds good to the common consumer, because obviously, Hydroxycut is a popular product. But considering 14 major Hydroxycut products were just barely recalled, this is not the most comforting association.
How does Certiphene work?
Being that neither of those products are known for working or containing a significant amount of said ingredients, this isn’t saying much. In addition, study results on chromium have been mixed, showing it to be more reliably effective for athletes than the average citizen, and there have been no studies on hoodia, an ingredient that is actually illegal to export from South Africa currently. They do cite a study conducted on Hoodia P57 by Phytofarm. However, Phytofarm scientists have openly admitted that a lot more research needs to be done and even with the P57 which has not been produced since they left that research behind several years ago, there are no definite results.
Overall Conclusion
Certiphene shows many of the signs of a scam, and you can expect to pay $59 every month should you get their “free trial offer.” However, you will not lose weight with Certiphene. it simply does not have the right ingredients, the right amounts, or anything else. Certiphene will cause plenty of side effects. But it is just a waste of time and money in terms of weight loss results.

