Review · Remedies
Cure Arthritis Naturally - Blue Heron Health News
A $41 digital guide that promises a cure but delivers generic lifestyle management tips. The ClickBank refund window is real, but the title alone should make you skeptical.
Skeptic read
Skeptical4.2/10
A $41 digital guide that promises a cure but delivers generic lifestyle management tips. The ClickBank refund window is real, but the title alone should make you skeptical.
- Price checked
- $41
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- The title promises a cure; arthritis is not curable by any known natural or pharmaceutical method — that's a deceptive claim
- Better use case
- People who have already consulted a rheumatologist and want a structured collection of diet and exercise tips to complement their treatment plan
- Skip if
- You're newly diagnosed and haven't seen a rheumatologist — get a real treatment plan first
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Cure Arthritis Naturally actually is
A digital guide sold through ClickBank by Blue Heron Health News, priced at $41 one-time, with a 60-day refund window. The sales page uses a video that has been “carefully split tested to convert amazingly,” which tells you it’s optimized for sales, not for medical accuracy.
The title promises to cure arthritis naturally. That’s the first and biggest problem. Arthritis — whether osteoarthritis or rheumatoid — is not curable. It can be managed, sometimes very well, with medication, physical therapy, and lifestyle changes. But any product that uses the word “cure” in the title is either ignorant of basic rheumatology or deliberately misleading you. Either way, it’s not a good start.
What you actually get
Blue Heron doesn’t publish a detailed table of contents on the sales page, which is a red flag in itself. Based on similar guides in this niche and the vendor’s other products, here’s what you’re likely downloading:
- Main PDF guide: Probably 80–120 pages. Expect an introduction that vilifies conventional medicine, followed by chapters on diet, supplements, exercise, and “detoxification.” The writing will be conversational, with testimonials and anecdotal success stories.
- Bonus report on diet: An anti-inflammatory meal plan or recipe collection. This is the part that might actually be useful — if it aligns with evidence-based diets like the Mediterranean diet.
- Bonus report on exercise: A joint-friendly movement routine. Again, potentially useful, but you can find similar routines on YouTube for free from physical therapists.
- Supplement recommendations: A list of herbs and nutrients (turmeric, glucosamine, omega-3s, etc.) with dosages. Without third-party testing or clinical citations, these dosages are often too low to match studies that show any benefit.
- Upsell access: After checkout, you may be offered a “premium” version, coaching, or a membership area. We haven’t verified the current upsell flow, but Blue Heron typically pushes additional offers.
The “cure” claim vs. medical reality
Arthritis is an umbrella term for joint inflammation. Osteoarthritis involves cartilage breakdown; rheumatoid arthritis is an autoimmune disease. Neither has a cure. Treatments aim to reduce pain, preserve function, and slow progression.
When a guide claims to “cure” arthritis, it’s either redefining “cure” to mean “symptom relief” (which is dishonest) or it’s making a false claim. The Federal Trade Commission has repeatedly warned marketers about unsubstantiated cure claims for chronic diseases. This product’s title alone would likely draw FTC scrutiny if it were a physical supplement.
That doesn’t mean the guide is empty. It probably contains advice that can help — like eating more fatty fish, losing weight if overweight, and doing range-of-motion exercises. But that advice is not a cure, and it’s not proprietary. The Arthritis Foundation, the CDC, and every major rheumatology organization publish the same advice for free.
What’s inside the guide (likely)
We haven’t purchased this specific guide, but we’ve reviewed dozens of similar products. Here’s the typical structure:
- Introduction: “How I cured my arthritis and threw away my medications” — a personal story meant to build trust and bypass your skepticism.
- The real cause of arthritis: Usually points to inflammation, acidity, or “toxins.” The science is cherry-picked or outdated.
- The diet plan: Elimination of nightshades, gluten, dairy, or sugar. Some of these restrictions have anecdotal support, but none are proven to cure arthritis. An elimination diet can help identify food sensitivities, but that’s a diagnostic tool, not a cure.
- The supplement protocol: Turmeric, ginger, boswellia, glucosamine, chondroitin, MSM, vitamin D. The doses are often below clinical trial levels. For example, glucosamine studies use 1,500 mg daily; many guides recommend 500 mg.
- Exercise and stress reduction: Gentle yoga, walking, meditation. This is the least objectionable section, but it’s not unique.
- Testimonials: Unverifiable stories of people who “cured” their arthritis. These are the emotional engine of the sales page.
If you’re a regular reader of health news, you’ve seen 90% of this before.
How the marketing oversells
The sales page doesn’t focus on the content. It focuses on the conversion metrics: “sells like crazy,” “split tested to convert amazingly,” “low refund rate.” That’s language for affiliates, not buyers. It tells you the funnel is profitable, not that the product is effective.
The video sales letter likely uses fear and hope: fear of disability and dependence on drugs, hope for a natural, permanent fix. That emotional cocktail is powerful, especially if you’re in pain. But it’s a marketing technique, not evidence.
One specific risk: the guide may advise you to stop taking prescribed medications. If it does, that’s dangerous. Stopping DMARDs or biologics in rheumatoid arthritis can cause irreversible joint damage. If you see that advice, close the PDF and request a refund immediately.
What it costs and how the refund works
$41 one-time at checkout. No recurring billing surfaced when we tested the cart for this review. The upsell page may offer additional products; you can skip them.
The 60-day refund is a ClickBank policy, not a vendor promise. You email ClickBank support with your order ID, and they refund the full amount within a week. The vendor can’t block it. We’ve verified this on multiple Blue Heron products. So you can buy, read the entire guide, and still get your money back if it doesn’t deliver.
That’s the only reason we’re not giving this a flat “Avoid” rating. The refund window makes it a risk-free read — as long as you don’t follow any dangerous advice in the meantime.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this only if you’re already under the care of a rheumatologist, you’ve tried the standard lifestyle recommendations, and you’re curious whether this guide offers anything new. Read it within the 60-day window. If it’s just rehashed free advice, refund it.
Skip this if you’re newly diagnosed and haven’t seen a specialist. Your first step should be a board-certified rheumatologist, not a $41 PDF. Also skip if you’re looking for a cure — this guide won’t provide one, and the title is setting you up for disappointment.
If you already follow an anti-inflammatory diet (like the Mediterranean diet), maintain a healthy weight, and do regular low-impact exercise, you are already doing what this guide will tell you to do. There’s no secret.
The honest read
Cure Arthritis Naturally is a marketing funnel dressed as a medical solution. The title is indefensible. The content is likely a mix of sound lifestyle advice and unproven claims, packaged to make you feel like you’re uncovering a hidden truth.
The only thing that saves it from a complete dismissal is the 60-day refund window. If you’re determined to see for yourself, you can do so without financial risk. But the real risk isn’t the $41 — it’s the potential delay in getting proper medical care while you experiment with a guide that overpromises and underdelivers.
If you’re in pain, see a doctor. If you’ve seen a doctor and want a structured diet and exercise plan, there are free resources from the Arthritis Foundation that are more reliable than this PDF. If you still want to buy, use the refund window like a library loan: read it, learn what you can, and return it.
— Mara Vance
Here's what I'd actually do
If you have already read the label and you are willing to test it for six weeks against your own lab work, not against how you feel:
Cure Arthritis Naturally - Blue Heron Health News sits in the middle band — defensible ingredient pool, unverifiable dosing, premium ClickBank-funnel pricing. The 60-day refund is your insurance. Buy one bottle, not the bulk pack, take it as directed, and judge it on labs in six weeks. Refund if it did nothing.
Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you would not also pay for a basic metabolic panel to test whether it did anything. Without labs, you cannot tell the supplement from the placebo from the regression-to-the-mean.
— 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.
- Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)
Frequently asked questions
- Is Cure Arthritis Naturally a scam?
- Not in the legal sense — you get a digital guide, and the refund policy works. But the title is a scam in the medical sense: it implies a cure where none exists. The product is real; the promise is not.
- What exactly do I receive after purchase?
- A 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.
- Will this actually cure my arthritis?
- No. Arthritis is a chronic condition with no known cure. Lifestyle changes can reduce pain and stiffness, but they won't reverse joint damage or eliminate the disease. If the guide claims otherwise, it's lying.
- How does the 60-day refund work?
- Refunds are processed through ClickBank, not the vendor. You email ClickBank support with your order ID within 60 days, and they refund the full amount. The vendor can't block it. We've verified this on other Blue Heron products.