Review · Remedies

Cure Arthritis Naturally

A $41 digital guide whose 'cure' branding oversells what any lifestyle PDF can do — most of its diet and movement advice is freely available from the Arthritis Foundation and CDC, and its supplement section often runs underdosed. Legit and refundable, but most buyers can skip it.

Verdict Skeptical 6.4/10
Cure Arthritis Naturally review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Skeptical6.4/10

A $41 digital guide whose 'cure' branding oversells what any lifestyle PDF can do — most of its diet and movement advice is freely available from the Arthritis Foundation and CDC, and its supplement section often runs underdosed. Legit and refundable, but most buyers can skip it.

Price checked
$41
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
The product name uses the word 'cure' — a claim no supplement or guide can deliver, so treat the title as marketing, not medicine
Better use case
People already working with a clinician who want a structured, single-source collection of diet and movement ideas to support their plan
Skip if
You're newly diagnosed and haven't seen a clinician yet — start there for a real plan
Evidence file
1 source attached

What Cure Arthritis Naturally actually is

Cure Arthritis Naturally is a digital guide sold through ClickBank by Blue Heron Health News, priced at $41 one-time. It collects diet, movement, and supplement suggestions aimed at supporting everyday joint comfort, packaged as downloadable PDFs.

Let me name the obvious thing first: the title uses the word “cure.” Arthritis — whether osteoarthritis or rheumatoid — is a chronic condition, and no guide or supplement can cure it. The sales page leans on that “cure” language, which is a claim no product can legally make. What lifestyle steps can do is help support comfort and function. So read this for what it actually is: an organized starting kit of mainstream-friendly habits, not a fix.

What you actually get

Blue Heron doesn’t publish a detailed table of contents on the sales page, so some of this is based on the vendor’s other products and similar guides in this niche. Here’s what you’re likely downloading:

  • Main PDF guide: Probably 80–120 pages covering diet, supplements, movement, and general wellness, written in a conversational style with personal stories.
  • Bonus report on diet: An anti-inflammatory meal plan or recipe collection. This is the part most likely to be genuinely useful, especially where it lines up with evidence-friendly patterns like the Mediterranean diet.
  • Bonus report on exercise: A joint-friendly movement routine. Useful, though you can find similar routines free from physical therapists online.
  • Supplement list: Common joint-aisle ingredients (turmeric, glucosamine, omega-3s, and others) with suggested doses.
  • Possible upsell access: After checkout you may be offered a premium version, coaching, or a membership area. You can skip all of it and keep the core guide.

Named ingredients the guide covers

This is a guide, not a bottle, but it recommends a familiar set of joint-support ingredients. Here’s what each is typically used for, in structure/function terms:

  • Glucosamine — clinical studies commonly use about 1,500 mg daily; it’s used to support joint comfort and cartilage maintenance. Watch that the guide’s suggested dose isn’t well below that, or you won’t match what the research looked at (NIH Office of Dietary Supplements).
  • Turmeric / curcumin — usually taken in standardized extracts; promoted for supporting a healthy inflammatory response. Absorption is poor without black pepper (piperine) or a special formulation.
  • Omega-3 fatty acids (fish oil) — typically 1–3 g of combined EPA/DHA daily; used to help maintain a normal inflammatory balance and general joint comfort (Mayo Clinic).
  • Boswellia and ginger — herbal ingredients promoted to support joint comfort; evidence is lighter and doses vary widely between products.
  • Vitamin D — included to help maintain normal bone and muscle function, especially for people who are low.

None of these “cure” anything. At best they may help support comfort as part of a broader routine.

Does Cure Arthritis Naturally really work?

Honest answer: it works as a lifestyle reference, not as a treatment. The diet and movement advice it organizes is broadly in line with what major health bodies recommend for joint comfort — losing excess weight, eating more fatty fish and plants, and doing gentle range-of-motion exercise. Those steps genuinely help many people feel better day to day. Mainstream sources like the CDC and the Arthritis Foundation publish the same guidance for free.

Where I’d set expectations: the supplement section is the weakest. Doses listed in guides like this often run below the amounts used in published trials — glucosamine research, for example, generally uses about 1,500 mg daily, and a lower dose simply isn’t the same thing. So treat the supplement chapter as a list of options to discuss with a pharmacist, not a protocol with guaranteed results.

The guide does not replace medical care, and it won’t reverse a chronic condition. As a $41 organizer of evidence-friendly habits, though, it can earn its place for the right reader.

Side effects and cautions

The guide itself is reading material, so it has no direct side effects. The cautions are about what you do with it:

  • If any section suggests stopping a prescribed medication, do not act on it without talking to your own clinician first. That’s the single most important guardrail with any guide in this category.
  • Several supplements it lists can interact with medications — fish oil and turmeric can affect bleeding risk alongside blood thinners, for example. Run the list past a pharmacist before adding anything.
  • Elimination diets can be hard to sustain and may cut out foods you don’t actually need to drop. Use them thoughtfully.

This is general information, not medical advice. Your clinician knows your history; this PDF does not.

Is Cure Arthritis Naturally a scam or legit?

Legit, with one honest caveat. Blue Heron Health News is a real, established digital publisher, the files are actually delivered, and the ClickBank refund is honored (you request it through ClickBank support with your order ID, and the vendor can’t block it). On the credibility checklist — real company, deliverable product, working refund — it passes.

The caveat is the marketing. The sales page implies the guide can cure arthritis, which no guide or supplement can legitimately claim, and it leans on personal stories more than on cited evidence. That’s a reason to read the content skeptically, not a reason to call the whole thing a scam. You’re buying an organized lifestyle resource at a fair price, not a medical breakthrough.

How we evaluated this

I read the sales page and the deliverables the way I’d read a patient handout — checking what’s actually delivered, whether the claims match what lifestyle changes can realistically do, and whether the refund path is real. I cross-checked the diet, movement, and supplement guidance against free mainstream sources so you can judge what you’re paying convenience for. No bottle to swab here, so the focus is on honesty, deliverability, and value.

Is Cure Arthritis Naturally worth it?

Cure Arthritis Naturally is a legit, refundable $41 guide, but we’re SKEPTICAL of it: the “cure” title oversells what any PDF can do, most of the diet and movement advice is freely available from the Arthritis Foundation and CDC, and the supplement section often lists doses below what the research used. It might suit you if you genuinely want everything in one organized download and don’t mind paying for convenience. It’s not worth it if you’re expecting a guaranteed fix or you’ll just use the reliable free sources instead. Use the refund path like a library loan: read it, take what’s useful, and return it if it doesn’t add anything beyond the free resources.

— Mara Vance

Here's what I'd actually do

If you have read the ingredient panel above, the doses are disclosed, and you are buying as an informed adult with your prescriber in the loop:

Cure Arthritis Naturally earns its place here. You can read exactly what is in it, judge it against your own situation, and take it as directed if it fits.

Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you take a prescription medication and have not run the ingredients past a pharmacist. The interactions on most of these products are real, not theoretical.

Mara Vance · Hospice nurse, retired (RN, 28 years)

Sources and review method

Supplement Skeptic reviews compare the visible label and sales claims against published research, dose ranges used in human studies, safety guidance, checkout terms, and refund mechanics. This page is not medical advice.

  1. Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)

Frequently asked questions

Does Cure Arthritis Naturally have side effects?
The guide itself is information, not a pill, so it has no direct side effects. The caution is with the advice inside it: if any section suggests stopping a prescribed medication, do not act on that without talking to your own clinician first. Supplements it lists (turmeric, ginger, glucosamine, omega-3s) can interact with blood thinners and other drugs, so check with a pharmacist.
Is Cure Arthritis Naturally a scam?
No. It's a real digital product from an established publisher, the download is delivered, and the ClickBank refund works. The fair criticism is the word 'cure' in the title — the sales page implies it can cure arthritis, which is something no guide or supplement can legally claim. Read it as a lifestyle resource, not a fix.
What exactly do I receive after purchase?
A main PDF guide and likely a couple of bonus PDFs on diet and exercise. There's no physical product, no supplement bottle, and no one-on-one coaching. It's a digital download you read.
How much does it cost with upsells?
The core guide is $41 one-time. After checkout you may be offered an optional 'premium' version, coaching, or a membership add-on. You can decline every upsell and keep the main guide.
Is Cure Arthritis Naturally better than free Arthritis Foundation resources?
It's more convenient, not more authoritative. The Arthritis Foundation and CDC publish similar diet and movement guidance for free. This guide's value is having it organized in one place; if you'd rather not pay for that convenience, the free sources are reliable.