The Dangers of Birth Control Drugs
Due to its immense popularity, chances are, you or someone you know can be using Yaz.
Yes, we're referring to the birth control pill that has also advertised itself as a good treatment for PMS and acne.
But you probably didn't know that the FDA has not approved Yaz for any of the two, did you? Still, that is not the only problem.
In fact, how we wish that was the only problem.
Sadly, there have been confirmed reports that this drug has some serious side effects.
For one, it raises the potassium content of your body to dangerous levels.
This, in turn, can cause the following: heart attack, stroke, gallbladder and kidney problems, pulmonary embolism, and deep vein thrombosis.
These are definitely serious problems, many of which can even cause death.
So why do people continue buying this drug? Well, because if you ask around, especially doctors, they'll tell you that many women have shared success stories after using them and that the fatalities are, well, isolated cases.
True, the success stories are quite overwhelming.
In fact, that's precisely the reason why Yaz sales even hit a record $600 million last year.
What's more, they've also recently reported a 7.
4% year-on-year gain in the first quarter of this year.
Scouting around the Web doesn't help either.
More often than not, you'll read testimonials from girls who have tried the pill and woke up one day looking and (naturally) feeling great.
Testimonials like this far outnumber the so-called isolated cases; cases like mood swings, migraines and depressions ...
you can find these too if you look hard enough.
In the meantime, lets go back to what we mentioned earlier regarding the lack of FDA approval on its highly advertised therapeutic claims.
Bayer, the maker of Yaz, is quite notorious on making such claims despite having been warned by the FDA in the past.
This alone leaves us a lot of room to question the company's credibility.
While there's nothing wrong with trumpeting a product's strengths, it is still a major responsibility for the company to also state, in the same breath, the severe risks involved.
Most especially if the product is a drug and the side effects may lead to serious and even fatal health defects.
While we're not telling you to stop using it outright if you're using it already, we still strongly encourage you to ask the right people who can show you both sides of the coin.
You won't get anything from doctors, who'll be sure to give their own approval of Yaz faster than the girls who have actually tried them.
It's simple logic actually.
Surely you don't expect the same people who normally prescribe this stuff to lay it all down in a non-biased way.
Yes, we're referring to the birth control pill that has also advertised itself as a good treatment for PMS and acne.
But you probably didn't know that the FDA has not approved Yaz for any of the two, did you? Still, that is not the only problem.
In fact, how we wish that was the only problem.
Sadly, there have been confirmed reports that this drug has some serious side effects.
For one, it raises the potassium content of your body to dangerous levels.
This, in turn, can cause the following: heart attack, stroke, gallbladder and kidney problems, pulmonary embolism, and deep vein thrombosis.
These are definitely serious problems, many of which can even cause death.
So why do people continue buying this drug? Well, because if you ask around, especially doctors, they'll tell you that many women have shared success stories after using them and that the fatalities are, well, isolated cases.
True, the success stories are quite overwhelming.
In fact, that's precisely the reason why Yaz sales even hit a record $600 million last year.
What's more, they've also recently reported a 7.
4% year-on-year gain in the first quarter of this year.
Scouting around the Web doesn't help either.
More often than not, you'll read testimonials from girls who have tried the pill and woke up one day looking and (naturally) feeling great.
Testimonials like this far outnumber the so-called isolated cases; cases like mood swings, migraines and depressions ...
you can find these too if you look hard enough.
In the meantime, lets go back to what we mentioned earlier regarding the lack of FDA approval on its highly advertised therapeutic claims.
Bayer, the maker of Yaz, is quite notorious on making such claims despite having been warned by the FDA in the past.
This alone leaves us a lot of room to question the company's credibility.
While there's nothing wrong with trumpeting a product's strengths, it is still a major responsibility for the company to also state, in the same breath, the severe risks involved.
Most especially if the product is a drug and the side effects may lead to serious and even fatal health defects.
While we're not telling you to stop using it outright if you're using it already, we still strongly encourage you to ask the right people who can show you both sides of the coin.
You won't get anything from doctors, who'll be sure to give their own approval of Yaz faster than the girls who have actually tried them.
It's simple logic actually.
Surely you don't expect the same people who normally prescribe this stuff to lay it all down in a non-biased way.
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