That kind of line usually comes from clickbait health posts or ads trying to hook attention—not from anything scientifically meaningful.
A “trick” being framed as proof of a “high IQ” doesn’t actually tell you anything about effectiveness or safety. In health topics especially (vision, blood pressure, heart meds), the reliable signal is always:
- clinical evidence
- medical consensus
- and whether doctors actually recommend it
If something promises fast, dramatic results like “instant vision improvement” or “secret side effects doctors don’t want you to know,” it’s almost always marketing exaggeration.
If you’re referring to a specific trick, paste it here—I can break down whether it’s legit, harmless, or misleading.
