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You keep saying "Glad the SEC has been notified" but never are any details supplied. See also post 10829, 18030 and 10834.
See the last just before the links:
You state "Glad the SEC has been notified". I think everyone would be interested in the source of this information. Everyone would want to know exactly what was said to the SEC and by whom.
All real investors would want to see the letter (or email) to the SEC posted here.
But then again, this 'SEC notified' claim is many months old, so the veracity of this claim is highly suspect.
You state "Glad the SEC has been notified". I think everyone would be interested in the source of this information. Everyone would want to know exactly what was said to the SEC and by whom.
All real investors would want to see the letter (or email) to the SEC posted here.
But then again, this 'SEC notified' claim is many months old, so the veracity of this claim is highly suspect.
Unfortunately for you, insolvent means being unable to pay your bills. Roth is paying all its bills and is therefore not insolvent.
You are entitled to your own opinons, but not your own facts and not your own definitions.
Happy New Year to all Roth posters and message readers too!
Wishing everyone good health and a prosperous 2018.
Update: Yield sign gone. Roth is now current with OTC Markets.
Big deal! Every time there is a yield sign it has been removed within a week or so. The real investers realize this is not a big deal and the evidence is no stock dumping. The small quantities of trades are most likely due to some small holders adjusting for year end taxes and rebalancing, etc. This is normal for this time of year.
Agreed!
This is a general warning and does not apply to Roth and Sucanon. For the benefit of all readers, he is a link to the complete FDA article:
Consumer Updates > Beware of Illegally Marketed Diabetes Treatments
https://www.fda.gov/ForConsumers/ConsumerUpdates/ucm361487.htm
They are not in the dark by any measure. Electirc bills are being paid for the large Las Vegas office and it is quite well lit.
A few days late filing hard equates to scam or fraud.
Of course pink sheet stocks are unaudited.
This is not breaking news.
Sorry, but these are press releases, not lies. All of these press releases were true at the time of release. The ABC Hospital clinical trials is still in play. Remembr that not every venture will pan out, but that does not make it a lie.
An untruth is a lie if it known to be untrue at the time it is said, and surely you can think of many examples. Certainly repeating an incorrect statement even after the error is pointed out would be a lie, for example.
Post #10714 is a general warning and does not apply to Roth and Sucanon. For the benefit of all readers, he is a link to the complete FDA article:
Consumer Updates > Beware of Illegally Marketed Diabetes Treatments
https://www.fda.gov/ForConsumers/ConsumerUpdates/ucm361487.htm
As for the previous modified Consumer Reports article, basically FDA wording (ref post #4477) here is the complete article and link:
https://www.fda.gov/ForConsumers/ConsumerUpdates/ucm361487.htm
http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/news/2013/07/diabetes-treatment-alternatives/index.htm
Here is the full Consumer Reports article. I have highlighted in bold red the omitted sentence.
Watch out for fake diabetes treatments
Published: July 31, 2013 08:00 AM
If you see products on store shelves that claim to treat, cure, or prevent diabetes and its complications, the Food and Drug Administration wants to you to beware: it warned 15 companies last week about the illegal marketing of certain diabetes products, including Glucocil, Glytain, ProBeta’s Gynmena Sylvestre, and Zostrix Joint and Arthritis Pain Relief Cream.
What can you do? Watch out for the following product types and their treatment claims:
• “Natural” supplements. We’ve warned consumers in the past about the dangers of supplements. Some drugs labeled as “natural” were found to contain pharmaceutical ingredients that may actually harm rather than help.
• Dietary supplements. These supplements claim to treat and even prevent diabetes. These products are not FDA approved and therefore cannot make such a claim.
• Online pharmacy drugs. Online suppliers are selling prescription drugs to people without a prescription. Unapproved versions of diabetes drugs are found on these pharmacy websites.
• Unapproved OTC medications. These drugs claim to relieve symptoms associated with diabetes, but are not approved by the FDA.
Besides potential harm from the various treatments, there is concern that using these products will prevent people from seeking medical treatment and FDA-approved drugs.
Here are three generic, low-cost options that our CR Best Buy Drug experts recommend you discuss with your doctor:
• Metformin and Metformin Sustained Release (alone or with glipizide or glimepiride)
• Glipizide and Glipizide Sustained release (alone or with metformin
• Glimepiride (alone or with metformin)
In addition to taking medicine, it’s important to closely monitor your blood sugar. In our tests of blood glucose meters, the Accu-Chek Aviva and the FreeStyle Freedom Lite were two that came out on top. Results from blood glucose meters can help patients make adjustments to diet, exercise, and treatment plans. Close monitoring can help to lower the risk of diabetes-related issues, such as kidney disease and seizures.
Although there are no reported injuries yet, according to the FDA, the agency urged people who have experienced any side effects to report them through an online form.
— Ciara Rafferty
As for post #10707, here is the truth:
You state that "Sales are down around 90% in Mexico (last quarter, another losing quarter they did a whopping 20k in sales!)"
Instead of just a snippit of information, lets take a look at the entire picture.
Sales (total revenue)
Annual (period ending)
6/30/16.....263k
6/30/15......86k
6/30/14.....529k
6/30/13.....153k
Quarterly (period ending)
3/31/17......21k
12/31/16....124k
9/30/16......36k
6/31/16......25k
3/31/16......77k
12/31/15.....70k
Looking closely at the data, one can see that yes, there was a large decline from the 12/31/16 quarter (124k) to the 3/31/17 quarter (21k). This is an 83% decline from the previous quarter. I presume this is supposed to be the 90% decline figure, but its not quite correct. Looking closer at the quarterly sales, one can see that the 124k is very large compared to the other quarterly sales, so the decline looks worse than it really is. Maybe a better measure is to average the 124k and the 21k? The average is 72.5k.
For fiscal year 2017, 2 quarters are reported with sales of 21k and 124k for a total of 145k. Assuming the same sales pace for the 2nd half of 2017, this would result in 290k sales for FY 2017.
Compare the 290k projection for 2017 with the previous 4 years:
2016 - 263k
2015 - 86k
2014 - 529k
2013 - 153k
The previous post would have you believe that sales are tanking when in fact they are holding pretty steady. The devil is in the details, so I encourage everyone to look closely at the details and to always consider the source of the posted information.
All data above is easily available on OTC Markets.
In post #10707 it is stated that Roth is insolvent. All bills are being paid and Roth therefor is not insolvent.
In post #10712 all 15 items have been debunled many times.
Incorrect - these are not lies, but just press releases. The latest one about the clinical trials is still in play.
Seems like its not soaking in. The 3 million is debt. This is different from monthly bills. The monthly bills are being paid and therefore Roth is not insolvent.
Under the Uniform Commercial Code, a person is considered to be insolvent when the party has ceased to pay its debts in the ordinary course of business, or cannot pay its debts as they become due, or is insolvent within the meaning of the Bankruptcy Code.
Insolvency - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insolvency
Again, more incorrect information. Insolvent is claimed repeatedly, but we both know this is incorrect. Insolvent means not being able to pay the bills. Insolvent has nothing to do with long term debt.
As for fraudulent, there is nothng to this and never has been on the part of Roth, but maybe the following is applicable:
Post #10714 is a general warning and does not apply to Roth and Sucanon. For the benefit of all readers, he is a link to the complete FDA article:
Consumer Updates > Beware of Illegally Marketed Diabetes Treatments
https://www.fda.gov/ForConsumers/ConsumerUpdates/ucm361487.htm
As for the previous modified Consumer Reports article, basically FDA wording (ref post #4477) here is the complete article and link:
https://www.fda.gov/ForConsumers/ConsumerUpdates/ucm361487.htm
http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/news/2013/07/diabetes-treatment-alternatives/index.htm
Here is the full Consumer Reports article. I have highlighted in bold red the omitted sentence.
Watch out for fake diabetes treatments
Published: July 31, 2013 08:00 AM
If you see products on store shelves that claim to treat, cure, or prevent diabetes and its complications, the Food and Drug Administration wants to you to beware: it warned 15 companies last week about the illegal marketing of certain diabetes products, including Glucocil, Glytain, ProBeta’s Gynmena Sylvestre, and Zostrix Joint and Arthritis Pain Relief Cream.
What can you do? Watch out for the following product types and their treatment claims:
• “Natural” supplements. We’ve warned consumers in the past about the dangers of supplements. Some drugs labeled as “natural” were found to contain pharmaceutical ingredients that may actually harm rather than help.
• Dietary supplements. These supplements claim to treat and even prevent diabetes. These products are not FDA approved and therefore cannot make such a claim.
• Online pharmacy drugs. Online suppliers are selling prescription drugs to people without a prescription. Unapproved versions of diabetes drugs are found on these pharmacy websites.
• Unapproved OTC medications. These drugs claim to relieve symptoms associated with diabetes, but are not approved by the FDA.
Besides potential harm from the various treatments, there is concern that using these products will prevent people from seeking medical treatment and FDA-approved drugs.
Here are three generic, low-cost options that our CR Best Buy Drug experts recommend you discuss with your doctor:
• Metformin and Metformin Sustained Release (alone or with glipizide or glimepiride)
• Glipizide and Glipizide Sustained release (alone or with metformin
• Glimepiride (alone or with metformin)
In addition to taking medicine, it’s important to closely monitor your blood sugar. In our tests of blood glucose meters, the Accu-Chek Aviva and the FreeStyle Freedom Lite were two that came out on top. Results from blood glucose meters can help patients make adjustments to diet, exercise, and treatment plans. Close monitoring can help to lower the risk of diabetes-related issues, such as kidney disease and seizures.
Although there are no reported injuries yet, according to the FDA, the agency urged people who have experienced any side effects to report them through an online form.
— Ciara Rafferty
As for post #10707, here is the truth:
You state that "Sales are down around 90% in Mexico (last quarter, another losing quarter they did a whopping 20k in sales!)"
Instead of just a snippit of information, lets take a look at the entire picture.
Sales (total revenue)
Annual (period ending)
6/30/16.....263k
6/30/15......86k
6/30/14.....529k
6/30/13.....153k
Quarterly (period ending)
3/31/17......21k
12/31/16....124k
9/30/16......36k
6/31/16......25k
3/31/16......77k
12/31/15.....70k
Looking closely at the data, one can see that yes, there was a large decline from the 12/31/16 quarter (124k) to the 3/31/17 quarter (21k). This is an 83% decline from the previous quarter. I presume this is supposed to be the 90% decline figure, but its not quite correct. Looking closer at the quarterly sales, one can see that the 124k is very large compared to the other quarterly sales, so the decline looks worse than it really is. Maybe a better measure is to average the 124k and the 21k? The average is 72.5k.
For fiscal year 2017, 2 quarters are reported with sales of 21k and 124k for a total of 145k. Assuming the same sales pace for the 2nd half of 2017, this would result in 290k sales for FY 2017.
Compare the 290k projection for 2017 with the previous 4 years:
2016 - 263k
2015 - 86k
2014 - 529k
2013 - 153k
The previous post would have you believe that sales are tanking when in fact they are holding pretty steady. The devil is in the details, so I encourage everyone to look closely at the details and to always consider the source of the posted information.
All data above is easily available on OTC Markets.
In post #10707 it is stated that Roth is insolvent. All bills are being paid and Roth therefor is not insolvent.
In post #10712 all 15 items have been debunled many times.
Post #10714 is a general warning and does not apply to Roth and Sucanon. For the benefit of all readers, he is a link to the complete FDA article:
Consumer Updates > Beware of Illegally Marketed Diabetes Treatments
https://www.fda.gov/ForConsumers/ConsumerUpdates/ucm361487.htm
As for the previous modified Consumer Reports article, basically FDA wording (ref post #4477) here is the complete article and link:
https://www.fda.gov/ForConsumers/ConsumerUpdates/ucm361487.htm
http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/news/2013/07/diabetes-treatment-alternatives/index.htm
Here is the full Consumer Reports article. I have highlighted in bold red the omitted sentence.
Watch out for fake diabetes treatments
Published: July 31, 2013 08:00 AM
If you see products on store shelves that claim to treat, cure, or prevent diabetes and its complications, the Food and Drug Administration wants to you to beware: it warned 15 companies last week about the illegal marketing of certain diabetes products, including Glucocil, Glytain, ProBeta’s Gynmena Sylvestre, and Zostrix Joint and Arthritis Pain Relief Cream.
What can you do? Watch out for the following product types and their treatment claims:
• “Natural” supplements. We’ve warned consumers in the past about the dangers of supplements. Some drugs labeled as “natural” were found to contain pharmaceutical ingredients that may actually harm rather than help.
• Dietary supplements. These supplements claim to treat and even prevent diabetes. These products are not FDA approved and therefore cannot make such a claim.
• Online pharmacy drugs. Online suppliers are selling prescription drugs to people without a prescription. Unapproved versions of diabetes drugs are found on these pharmacy websites.
• Unapproved OTC medications. These drugs claim to relieve symptoms associated with diabetes, but are not approved by the FDA.
Besides potential harm from the various treatments, there is concern that using these products will prevent people from seeking medical treatment and FDA-approved drugs.
Here are three generic, low-cost options that our CR Best Buy Drug experts recommend you discuss with your doctor:
• Metformin and Metformin Sustained Release (alone or with glipizide or glimepiride)
• Glipizide and Glipizide Sustained release (alone or with metformin
• Glimepiride (alone or with metformin)
In addition to taking medicine, it’s important to closely monitor your blood sugar. In our tests of blood glucose meters, the Accu-Chek Aviva and the FreeStyle Freedom Lite were two that came out on top. Results from blood glucose meters can help patients make adjustments to diet, exercise, and treatment plans. Close monitoring can help to lower the risk of diabetes-related issues, such as kidney disease and seizures.
Although there are no reported injuries yet, according to the FDA, the agency urged people who have experienced any side effects to report them through an online form.
— Ciara Rafferty
As for post #10707, here is the truth:
You state that "Sales are down around 90% in Mexico (last quarter, another losing quarter they did a whopping 20k in sales!)"
Instead of just a snippit of information, lets take a look at the entire picture.
Sales (total revenue)
Annual (period ending)
6/30/16.....263k
6/30/15......86k
6/30/14.....529k
6/30/13.....153k
Quarterly (period ending)
3/31/17......21k
12/31/16....124k
9/30/16......36k
6/31/16......25k
3/31/16......77k
12/31/15.....70k
Looking closely at the data, one can see that yes, there was a large decline from the 12/31/16 quarter (124k) to the 3/31/17 quarter (21k). This is an 83% decline from the previous quarter. I presume this is supposed to be the 90% decline figure, but its not quite correct. Looking closer at the quarterly sales, one can see that the 124k is very large compared to the other quarterly sales, so the decline looks worse than it really is. Maybe a better measure is to average the 124k and the 21k? The average is 72.5k.
For fiscal year 2017, 2 quarters are reported with sales of 21k and 124k for a total of 145k. Assuming the same sales pace for the 2nd half of 2017, this would result in 290k sales for FY 2017.
Compare the 290k projection for 2017 with the previous 4 years:
2016 - 263k
2015 - 86k
2014 - 529k
2013 - 153k
The previous post would have you believe that sales are tanking when in fact they are holding pretty steady. The devil is in the details, so I encourage everyone to look closely at the details and to always consider the source of the posted information.
All data above is easily available on OTC Markets.
In post #10707 it is stated that Roth is insolvent. All bills are being paid and Roth therefor is not insolvent.
In post #10712 all 15 items have been debunled many times.
This is a general warning and does not apply to Roth and Sucanon. For the benefit of all readers, he is a link to the complete FDA article:
Consumer Updates > Beware of Illegally Marketed Diabetes Treatments
https://www.fda.gov/ForConsumers/ConsumerUpdates/ucm361487.htm
As for the previous modified Consumer Reports article, basically FDA wording (ref post #4477) here is the complete article and link:
https://www.fda.gov/ForConsumers/ConsumerUpdates/ucm361487.htm
http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/news/2013/07/diabetes-treatment-alternatives/index.htm
Here is the full Consumer Reports article. I have highlighted in bold red the omitted sentence.
Watch out for fake diabetes treatments
Published: July 31, 2013 08:00 AM
If you see products on store shelves that claim to treat, cure, or prevent diabetes and its complications, the Food and Drug Administration wants to you to beware: it warned 15 companies last week about the illegal marketing of certain diabetes products, including Glucocil, Glytain, ProBeta’s Gynmena Sylvestre, and Zostrix Joint and Arthritis Pain Relief Cream.
What can you do? Watch out for the following product types and their treatment claims:
• “Natural” supplements. We’ve warned consumers in the past about the dangers of supplements. Some drugs labeled as “natural” were found to contain pharmaceutical ingredients that may actually harm rather than help.
• Dietary supplements. These supplements claim to treat and even prevent diabetes. These products are not FDA approved and therefore cannot make such a claim.
• Online pharmacy drugs. Online suppliers are selling prescription drugs to people without a prescription. Unapproved versions of diabetes drugs are found on these pharmacy websites.
• Unapproved OTC medications. These drugs claim to relieve symptoms associated with diabetes, but are not approved by the FDA.
Besides potential harm from the various treatments, there is concern that using these products will prevent people from seeking medical treatment and FDA-approved drugs.
Here are three generic, low-cost options that our CR Best Buy Drug experts recommend you discuss with your doctor:
• Metformin and Metformin Sustained Release (alone or with glipizide or glimepiride)
• Glipizide and Glipizide Sustained release (alone or with metformin
• Glimepiride (alone or with metformin)
In addition to taking medicine, it’s important to closely monitor your blood sugar. In our tests of blood glucose meters, the Accu-Chek Aviva and the FreeStyle Freedom Lite were two that came out on top. Results from blood glucose meters can help patients make adjustments to diet, exercise, and treatment plans. Close monitoring can help to lower the risk of diabetes-related issues, such as kidney disease and seizures.
Although there are no reported injuries yet, according to the FDA, the agency urged people who have experienced any side effects to report them through an online form.
— Ciara Rafferty
As for post #10707, here is the truth:
You state that "Sales are down around 90% in Mexico (last quarter, another losing quarter they did a whopping 20k in sales!)"
Instead of just a snippit of information, lets take a look at the entire picture.
Sales (total revenue)
Annual (period ending)
6/30/16.....263k
6/30/15......86k
6/30/14.....529k
6/30/13.....153k
Quarterly (period ending)
3/31/17......21k
12/31/16....124k
9/30/16......36k
6/31/16......25k
3/31/16......77k
12/31/15.....70k
Looking closely at the data, one can see that yes, there was a large decline from the 12/31/16 quarter (124k) to the 3/31/17 quarter (21k). This is an 83% decline from the previous quarter. I presume this is supposed to be the 90% decline figure, but its not quite correct. Looking closer at the quarterly sales, one can see that the 124k is very large compared to the other quarterly sales, so the decline looks worse than it really is. Maybe a better measure is to average the 124k and the 21k? The average is 72.5k.
For fiscal year 2017, 2 quarters are reported with sales of 21k and 124k for a total of 145k. Assuming the same sales pace for the 2nd half of 2017, this would result in 290k sales for FY 2017.
Compare the 290k projection for 2017 with the previous 4 years:
2016 - 263k
2015 - 86k
2014 - 529k
2013 - 153k
The previous post would have you believe that sales are tanking when in fact they are holding pretty steady. The devil is in the details, so I encourage everyone to look closely at the details and to always consider the source of the posted information.
All data above is easily available on OTC Markets.
In post #10707 it is stated that Roth is insolvent. All bills are being paid and Roth therefor is not insolvent.
In post #10712 all 15 items have been debunled many times.
Sucanon is approved in Mexico and Canada and soon India.
A Google search gives the following link to the full FDA article.
Consumer Updates > Beware of Illegally Marketed Diabetes Treatments
https://www.fda.gov/ForConsumers/ConsumerUpdates/ucm361487.htm
Everone should note that there is no reference to Roth or Sucanon and this article is a general warning only and does not apply here.
Only an application for over-the-counter sales was denied, not Sucanon outright, only because the FDA determined Sucanon to be a drug!. In fact, the FDA encouraged Roth to apply for drug approval.
This does not sound like a 'denied' to me.
Everyone knows this and you do too, but posts to the contrary continue to be appear in spite of overwhelming evidence.
I encourage everyone who has not already done so to read the FDA letter.
Not true! Sucanon was not banned by the FDA.
Always consider the source of information posted.
A Google search gives the following link to the full FDA article.
Consumer Updates > Beware of Illegally Marketed Diabetes Treatments
https://www.fda.gov/ForConsumers/ConsumerUpdates/ucm361487.htm
Everone should note that there is no referce to roth or Sucanon and this article is a general warning only and does not apply here.
The FDA issued no such warning to Roth. This is an attempt to connect Roth and Sucanon to a general warning that does not apply here.
Notice that there is no link for to the infrmation source.
Everyone beware of a a continuous disorganized attempts to discredit Roth and Sucanon via false, incorrect and misleading information as well as modified articles intended to falsely implicate Roth and Sucanon.
Everyone should always consider the source.
The Consumer Reports article essentially repeated the FDA warning almost word for word, so post #4477 modifies (by deleting a key sentence) the Consumer Reports article AND the words of the FDA. So, not olny are you modifying the CR article you are also modifying the FDA's words. As Gomer Plye would say "Shame, Shame, Shame!"
Maybe Consumer Reports and the FDA would be interested to see how their words and articles are being misrepesented here on this board. Just maybe I will write to both of these fine organizatons.
Let us see how they respond since iHub does not seem to care.
Here is the full Consumer Reports article. I have highlighted in bold red the omitted sentence.
Watch out for fake diabetes treatments
Published: July 31, 2013 08:00 AM
If you see products on store shelves that claim to treat, cure, or prevent diabetes and its complications, the Food and Drug Administration wants to you to beware: it warned 15 companies last week about the illegal marketing of certain diabetes products, including Glucocil, Glytain, ProBeta’s Gynmena Sylvestre, and Zostrix Joint and Arthritis Pain Relief Cream.
What can you do? Watch out for the following product types and their treatment claims:
• “Natural” supplements. We’ve warned consumers in the past about the dangers of supplements. Some drugs labeled as “natural” were found to contain pharmaceutical ingredients that may actually harm rather than help.
• Dietary supplements. These supplements claim to treat and even prevent diabetes. These products are not FDA approved and therefore cannot make such a claim.
• Online pharmacy drugs. Online suppliers are selling prescription drugs to people without a prescription. Unapproved versions of diabetes drugs are found on these pharmacy websites.
• Unapproved OTC medications. These drugs claim to relieve symptoms associated with diabetes, but are not approved by the FDA.
Besides potential harm from the various treatments, there is concern that using these products will prevent people from seeking medical treatment and FDA-approved drugs.
Here are three generic, low-cost options that our CR Best Buy Drug experts recommend you discuss with your doctor:
• Metformin and Metformin Sustained Release (alone or with glipizide or glimepiride)
• Glipizide and Glipizide Sustained release (alone or with metformin
• Glimepiride (alone or with metformin)
In addition to taking medicine, it’s important to closely monitor your blood sugar. In our tests of blood glucose meters, the Accu-Chek Aviva and the FreeStyle Freedom Lite were two that came out on top. Results from blood glucose meters can help patients make adjustments to diet, exercise, and treatment plans. Close monitoring can help to lower the risk of diabetes-related issues, such as kidney disease and seizures.
Although there are no reported injuries yet, according to the FDA, the agency urged people who have experienced any side effects to report them through an online form.
— Ciara Rafferty
The Consumer Reports article essentially repeated the FDA warning almost word for word, so post #4477 modifies (by deleting a key sentence) the Consumer Reports article AND the words of the regulatory body, the FDA. So, not only are is the CR article modifyied the FDA's words are too. As Gomer Plye would say "Shame, Shame, Shame!"
Here is the full Consumer Reports article. I have highlighted in bold red the omitted sentence.
Watch out for fake diabetes treatments
Published: July 31, 2013 08:00 AM
If you see products on store shelves that claim to treat, cure, or prevent diabetes and its complications, the Food and Drug Administration wants to you to beware: it warned 15 companies last week about the illegal marketing of certain diabetes products, including Glucocil, Glytain, ProBeta’s Gynmena Sylvestre, and Zostrix Joint and Arthritis Pain Relief Cream.
What can you do? Watch out for the following product types and their treatment claims:
• “Natural” supplements. We’ve warned consumers in the past about the dangers of supplements. Some drugs labeled as “natural” were found to contain pharmaceutical ingredients that may actually harm rather than help.
• Dietary supplements. These supplements claim to treat and even prevent diabetes. These products are not FDA approved and therefore cannot make such a claim.
• Online pharmacy drugs. Online suppliers are selling prescription drugs to people without a prescription. Unapproved versions of diabetes drugs are found on these pharmacy websites.
• Unapproved OTC medications. These drugs claim to relieve symptoms associated with diabetes, but are not approved by the FDA.
Besides potential harm from the various treatments, there is concern that using these products will prevent people from seeking medical treatment and FDA-approved drugs.
Here are three generic, low-cost options that our CR Best Buy Drug experts recommend you discuss with your doctor:
• Metformin and Metformin Sustained Release (alone or with glipizide or glimepiride)
• Glipizide and Glipizide Sustained release (alone or with metformin
• Glimepiride (alone or with metformin)
In addition to taking medicine, it’s important to closely monitor your blood sugar. In our tests of blood glucose meters, the Accu-Chek Aviva and the FreeStyle Freedom Lite were two that came out on top. Results from blood glucose meters can help patients make adjustments to diet, exercise, and treatment plans. Close monitoring can help to lower the risk of diabetes-related issues, such as kidney disease and seizures.
Although there are no reported injuries yet, according to the FDA, the agency urged people who have experienced any side effects to report them through an online form.
— Ciara Rafferty
Let's all FOCUS on POST #4477 that was a modified Consumer Reports article.
Here is the full Consumer Reports article. I have highlighted in bold red the omitted sentence.
Watch out for fake diabetes treatments
Published: July 31, 2013 08:00 AM
If you see products on store shelves that claim to treat, cure, or prevent diabetes and its complications, the Food and Drug Administration wants to you to beware: it warned 15 companies last week about the illegal marketing of certain diabetes products, including Glucocil, Glytain, ProBeta’s Gynmena Sylvestre, and Zostrix Joint and Arthritis Pain Relief Cream.
What can you do? Watch out for the following product types and their treatment claims:
• “Natural” supplements. We’ve warned consumers in the past about the dangers of supplements. Some drugs labeled as “natural” were found to contain pharmaceutical ingredients that may actually harm rather than help.
• Dietary supplements. These supplements claim to treat and even prevent diabetes. These products are not FDA approved and therefore cannot make such a claim.
• Online pharmacy drugs. Online suppliers are selling prescription drugs to people without a prescription. Unapproved versions of diabetes drugs are found on these pharmacy websites.
• Unapproved OTC medications. These drugs claim to relieve symptoms associated with diabetes, but are not approved by the FDA.
Besides potential harm from the various treatments, there is concern that using these products will prevent people from seeking medical treatment and FDA-approved drugs.
Here are three generic, low-cost options that our CR Best Buy Drug experts recommend you discuss with your doctor:
• Metformin and Metformin Sustained Release (alone or with glipizide or glimepiride)
• Glipizide and Glipizide Sustained release (alone or with metformin
• Glimepiride (alone or with metformin)
In addition to taking medicine, it’s important to closely monitor your blood sugar. In our tests of blood glucose meters, the Accu-Chek Aviva and the FreeStyle Freedom Lite were two that came out on top. Results from blood glucose meters can help patients make adjustments to diet, exercise, and treatment plans. Close monitoring can help to lower the risk of diabetes-related issues, such as kidney disease and seizures.
Although there are no reported injuries yet, according to the FDA, the agency urged people who have experienced any side effects to report them through an online form.
— Ciara Rafferty
Again, for the 100th time, these 15 points have all been debunked, clarified, shown to be incorrect or misleading.
Post ias 100% incorrect and misleading.
Not a fraud
Not banned.
Sucanon was never sold or marketed in the USA, so to say "Not allowed in the USA" is pretty meaningless. It would be like saying I am not allowed to fly an airplane - well, of course not! I have no flying license but I never tried to fly one either. Please get a life.
Back to 10636 please. Would it not be fraudulent for anyone to modify an article and post it here?
Not a fake. Sucanon is approved in Mexico and Canada and this is a matter of public record. There are ongoing sales in Mexico.
The only thing fake is post #4477 which modified a Consumer Reports article to make it appear as though Sucanon was in this category which it clearly is not.
Any thinking person would have to ask themselves why an article from a respected national publication such as Consumer Reports would need to be modified and posted here on this board to falsely implicate Roth and Sucanon?
If the product were a 'diabetes scam' as you say, certainly you would be able to produce legitimate unmodified articles to make your case, but there are none.
If its irrelevant, they why did you post the modified Consumer Reports article in the first place? (Ref Post #4477)
Here is the full Consumer Reports article. I have highlighted in bold red the omitted sentence.
Watch out for fake diabetes treatments
Published: July 31, 2013 08:00 AM
If you see products on store shelves that claim to treat, cure, or prevent diabetes and its complications, the Food and Drug Administration wants to you to beware: it warned 15 companies last week about the illegal marketing of certain diabetes products, including Glucocil, Glytain, ProBeta’s Gynmena Sylvestre, and Zostrix Joint and Arthritis Pain Relief Cream.
What can you do? Watch out for the following product types and their treatment claims:
• “Natural” supplements. We’ve warned consumers in the past about the dangers of supplements. Some drugs labeled as “natural” were found to contain pharmaceutical ingredients that may actually harm rather than help.
• Dietary supplements. These supplements claim to treat and even prevent diabetes. These products are not FDA approved and therefore cannot make such a claim.
• Online pharmacy drugs. Online suppliers are selling prescription drugs to people without a prescription. Unapproved versions of diabetes drugs are found on these pharmacy websites.
• Unapproved OTC medications. These drugs claim to relieve symptoms associated with diabetes, but are not approved by the FDA.
Besides potential harm from the various treatments, there is concern that using these products will prevent people from seeking medical treatment and FDA-approved drugs.
Here are three generic, low-cost options that our CR Best Buy Drug experts recommend you discuss with your doctor:
• Metformin and Metformin Sustained Release (alone or with glipizide or glimepiride)
• Glipizide and Glipizide Sustained release (alone or with metformin
• Glimepiride (alone or with metformin)
In addition to taking medicine, it’s important to closely monitor your blood sugar. In our tests of blood glucose meters, the Accu-Chek Aviva and the FreeStyle Freedom Lite were two that came out on top. Results from blood glucose meters can help patients make adjustments to diet, exercise, and treatment plans. Close monitoring can help to lower the risk of diabetes-related issues, such as kidney disease and seizures.
Although there are no reported injuries yet, according to the FDA, the agency urged people who have experienced any side effects to report them through an online form.
— Ciara Rafferty
So now you say your very own post #4477 is irrelevant. Well, if it is irrelevant then why was it posted in the first place?
A 10,000 to 1 Reverse Split gets this baby to a Buck!
(ie $1 = a whole dollar!)
You say "Where there is smoke there is fire" and surely there was smoke in post #4477.
Here is the full Consumer Reports article. I have highlighted in bold red the omitted sentence.
Watch out for fake diabetes treatments
Published: July 31, 2013 08:00 AM
If you see products on store shelves that claim to treat, cure, or prevent diabetes and its complications, the Food and Drug Administration wants to you to beware: it warned 15 companies last week about the illegal marketing of certain diabetes products, including Glucocil, Glytain, ProBeta’s Gynmena Sylvestre, and Zostrix Joint and Arthritis Pain Relief Cream.
What can you do? Watch out for the following product types and their treatment claims:
• “Natural” supplements. We’ve warned consumers in the past about the dangers of supplements. Some drugs labeled as “natural” were found to contain pharmaceutical ingredients that may actually harm rather than help.
• Dietary supplements. These supplements claim to treat and even prevent diabetes. These products are not FDA approved and therefore cannot make such a claim.
• Online pharmacy drugs. Online suppliers are selling prescription drugs to people without a prescription. Unapproved versions of diabetes drugs are found on these pharmacy websites.
• Unapproved OTC medications. These drugs claim to relieve symptoms associated with diabetes, but are not approved by the FDA.
Besides potential harm from the various treatments, there is concern that using these products will prevent people from seeking medical treatment and FDA-approved drugs.
Here are three generic, low-cost options that our CR Best Buy Drug experts recommend you discuss with your doctor:
• Metformin and Metformin Sustained Release (alone or with glipizide or glimepiride)
• Glipizide and Glipizide Sustained release (alone or with metformin
• Glimepiride (alone or with metformin)
In addition to taking medicine, it’s important to closely monitor your blood sugar. In our tests of blood glucose meters, the Accu-Chek Aviva and the FreeStyle Freedom Lite were two that came out on top. Results from blood glucose meters can help patients make adjustments to diet, exercise, and treatment plans. Close monitoring can help to lower the risk of diabetes-related issues, such as kidney disease and seizures.
Although there are no reported injuries yet, according to the FDA, the agency urged people who have experienced any side effects to report them through an online form.
— Ciara Rafferty
Again, these have all been debunked many times. I am wondering what ever became of the letters supposedly sent to FINRA and SEC? Everyone on this board wold love too see these letters, with persoanl contact info removerd of course, as this would be very pertinent to stock holders and potential stock holders.
We all would love to see the responses from FINRA and SEC also, assuming of course letters were actually sent in the first place.
We all await with bated breath.
Sorry, but all 15 have been debunked multiple times.
Jennifer Lopez is hot, but does she own any stock?
You say "Lets all FOCUS on THIS SCAM no matter how the fraudsters try and misdirect the conversation", but speaking of misdirect the conversation here is a major misdirect from post #4477:
Here is the full Consumer Reports article. I have highlighted in bold red the omitted sentence.
Watch out for fake diabetes treatments
Published: July 31, 2013 08:00 AM
If you see products on store shelves that claim to treat, cure, or prevent diabetes and its complications, the Food and Drug Administration wants to you to beware: it warned 15 companies last week about the illegal marketing of certain diabetes products, including Glucocil, Glytain, ProBeta’s Gynmena Sylvestre, and Zostrix Joint and Arthritis Pain Relief Cream.
What can you do? Watch out for the following product types and their treatment claims:
• “Natural” supplements. We’ve warned consumers in the past about the dangers of supplements. Some drugs labeled as “natural” were found to contain pharmaceutical ingredients that may actually harm rather than help.
• Dietary supplements. These supplements claim to treat and even prevent diabetes. These products are not FDA approved and therefore cannot make such a claim.
• Online pharmacy drugs. Online suppliers are selling prescription drugs to people without a prescription. Unapproved versions of diabetes drugs are found on these pharmacy websites.
• Unapproved OTC medications. These drugs claim to relieve symptoms associated with diabetes, but are not approved by the FDA.
Besides potential harm from the various treatments, there is concern that using these products will prevent people from seeking medical treatment and FDA-approved drugs.
Here are three generic, low-cost options that our CR Best Buy Drug experts recommend you discuss with your doctor:
• Metformin and Metformin Sustained Release (alone or with glipizide or glimepiride)
• Glipizide and Glipizide Sustained release (alone or with metformin
• Glimepiride (alone or with metformin)
In addition to taking medicine, it’s important to closely monitor your blood sugar. In our tests of blood glucose meters, the Accu-Chek Aviva and the FreeStyle Freedom Lite were two that came out on top. Results from blood glucose meters can help patients make adjustments to diet, exercise, and treatment plans. Close monitoring can help to lower the risk of diabetes-related issues, such as kidney disease and seizures.
Although there are no reported injuries yet, according to the FDA, the agency urged people who have experienced any side effects to report them through an online form.
— Ciara Rafferty
I think you are saying Roth is the only one. All posting are against Roth, specifically against Mike Irving, and maybe a few about Renu, but no others.
Claims to be protecting everyone from all penny stocks is a sham, otherwise there would be postings on hundreds of penny stock boards, but there is essentially none.