I tried checking alkalife lydia 7 website to see for myself the technology that they use to see if it makes any sense at all to be able to cure any sort of illness.
On the website, there's an advertisement on how it cures diabetes / heart related illness / blood pressure/ cholesterol.
FYI, Section 3(1) of Medicines (Advertisement & Sale) Act, 1956 states:
Prohibition of any advertisement referring to any article in terms calculated to lead to the use of that article as a medicine, appliance or remedy for the purpose of
• prevention or treatment or diagnosis of certain diseases and condition of human being as specified in the Schedule (20 diseases)
Included in the list of 20 diseases, there's hypertension, diabetes and heart related illness.
Advertisements should not be exaggerated, false, misleading or deceptive. This sort of advertisement in their website is no different from the brochures we get in supermarket whereby certain product particularly jamu can cure ALL SORTS OF DISEASES ranging from hypertension to cancer to mental illness..
In the website of alkalife there's also an NSF mark which is downright misleading because besides that NSF mark, nothing else in that website has anything to do with NSF certification. alkalife is NOT NSF CERTIFIED So what is the NSF mark doing sitting there at the website?
The only illness it can possibly cure is probably acute dehydration.
Misread is the common word use in Malaysia mah.