The review of any product, no matter what is, should be based on objective facts, and not mere opinion. Certainly, opinion has its place when reviewing a product. That's because reasonable people will disagree. For example, some people may love the taste of Vanilla Coke, while others may think is tastes like swamp water. But now let’s take a look at the hair loss product, Provillus. Here’s the thing about a product that claims to prevent hair loss: Either it works, or it doesn’t.

That is, users of Provillus stop going bald if they use as directed -- or there hair keeps falling out. It either works or it doesn’t. Unlike the taste of a soft drink, subjective opinion takes a back seat. Hair loss or hair retention are easily observable effects, based on experience. And yet, when you sample reviews posted on Provillus, you inevitably find reviews and remarks that are all over the map, and come clearly based on nothing else but subjective opinion. So what’s going on here?

The thing is, the chemistry of the human body is complex. Not all medications work the same in all people. For example, some people can clear up a headache within minutes by taking Tylenol. Others report that Tylenol does nothing for them, and swear by good old aspirin. So who’s right and who’s wrong in the aspirin-Tylenol debate? What are the objective facts? Well, the fact is, both could be right.

One person’s body chemistry responds well to Tylenol, while another’s doesn’t. And so, this can be the case with Provillus, as it can with any medication seeking to induce a beneficial effect for the user. But wait -- there’s still more ways to judge the effectiveness of a product, such as Provillus. For example, does a product of a long track record of success? Does it stay on the market year after year? If it does, then it must being something positive for a lot of people.

Products that simply don’t work quickly disappear. The fact is, there is nothing more powerful than word-of-mouth advertising, and that’s especially true of a product which boasts to prevent hair loss. Provillus has stood the test of time, and that is objective fact. Next, consider the ingredients of a product. In the case of Provillus, the active ingredients are Saw Palmetto, a native American berry from a cactus-like plant, which has a long, even ancient history as a substance with much sought after medicinal and beneficial value, including the prevention of hair loss.

Provillus also contains Minoxidil, a drug approved by the FDA as a hair restoration product. So here we have the best of both worlds, a mixture of the ancient wisdom with modern technology. Both Saw Palmetto and Minoxidil have long, proven track records of success. Certainly, Provillus itself does not have FDA approval, but one of its key components, Minoxidil, does. An honest review makes that distinction clearly and forthrightly. So the facts here are this: that Provillus works, has worked for thousands of people, and will continue to work for thousands more in the future.

Does it work for absolutely everyone? No -- no drug in the world does that, not Tylenol, not aspirin, not Viagra, or any drug or remedy. Only con artists attempt to sell their products as “cure-alls” or as a panacea for everything from the common cold to cancer. The objective facts are that Provillus has been, and is, an extremely important and valued solution for thousands of men, and women, who are suffering from hair loss. It has stood the test of time, and proven itself to thousands of people this one simple fact: It works.

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