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Anonymous

I also tried QuickRelief and it MAY work for some, but definitely not me. Where it IS a scam is that they say it is "guaranteed to work or it's free." I could not locate the actual guarantee wording on the website prior to ordering, so I assumed "THAT" statement meant what MOST of us would expect...a full refund if it did not work. When I questioned procedures for getting a refund, I was THEN e-mailed a copy of the exact guarantee, which as mentioned above involves paying shipping monthly to get more "free?" product. My psoriasis actually got noticeably worse while using this product so WHY would I choose to spend MORE money to put questionable products into my body that may be making matters worse? Since when does ~$200=free? This is false advertising by the company and I wouldn't want anyone else to be misled by it. I was and still am unemployed, so there just is not money to try something else if this company fails to stand behind the words as they are written openly on the website...not the HIDDEN words you see when you try to utilize the guarantee. They state they are more accommodating than other companies for this situation, but I can tell you that another product I used failed miserably and made matters worse. THAT company was only charging about $40 for their product, with similar effectiveness "statistics" and when I brought it to their attention, they refunded my purchase price and covered my dermatologist bill, 12 laser treatments, and some prescription topical products that were needed to resolve the problem to the condition I was in before the use of the product. It's a TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN OPERATION and THAT is why I have a problem with QuickRelief. I wouldn't recommend this to my worst enemy.

May 7, 2012 - 10:11pm

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