Placing your first order? Use the code FIRST10 for 10% off on the checkout page.
We are aware of a problem with around 5-10% of customers getting a non responsive screen after clicking "confirm and pay". We are trying very hard to find and resolve the problem. Please phone us if you cannot checkout, but we are asking customer NOT to call us to take our order by telephone unless you are one of the 5-10% who genuinely cannot complete your order on our web site.
For various reasons, we do not currently plan to do a Black Friday Sale BUT we do plan to do a mid January Sale instead
Placing your first order? Use the code FIRST10 for 10% off on the checkout page.
We are aware of a problem with around 5-10% of customers getting a non responsive screen after clicking "confirm and pay". We are trying very hard to find and resolve the problem. Please phone us if you cannot checkout, but we are asking customer NOT to call us to take our order by telephone unless you are one of the 5-10% who genuinely cannot complete your order on our web site.
For various reasons, we do not currently plan to do a Black Friday Sale BUT we do plan to do a mid January Sale instead

The following article was published by one of our suppliers - Higher Nature, who have kindly allowed us to re-produce it. We endorse the explanation in this article as to why magnesium stearate is not dangerous as claimed by some writers, who as far as we are concerned don't really know what they are talking about.
Magnesium stearate is formed from the mineral magnesium and the fatty acid stearic acid. Stearic acid is commonly found in nature, in foods such as meat, fish, eggs, dairy products, grains, cocoa, olive and coconut oils. Beef fat contains between 9-16% stearic acid. Cocoa fat contains 10-12% of stearic acid, with a bar of chocolate typically containing 5g. By comparison, a dietary supplement capsule product contains between 0.25-1.5% stearic acid. So it has negligible biological activity because of the amount used.
Based on a significant body of evidence, the FSA (Food Standards Agency) has ruled that magnesium stearate is safe, with the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) approving levels below 2.5g of magnesium stearate/kg body weight/day. That means a 68kg person would have to consume 170g per day, which is far beyond any amount you would encounter in supplements.
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