FAQ's
When will I receive my order?
Orders are shipped out via United States Postal Service unless you choose expedited shipping. Orders shipped via United States Postal Service take approximately five to seven business days from when the order is placed to when it is received.
What is your return policy?
We offer a money-back guarantee. If for any reason you are not satisfied with your purchase from www.Miracle-Body.com or www.Miracle-Salt.com, call our Customer Support number at 1-888-268-5556. Our Customer Support team will provide you with an authorization number to be written down and sent back with your order. You may ship the product(s) back to us at your expense, and we will refund the cost of the product(s) and sales tax (if applicable).
Do you offer a healthy living kit for kids?
We do have a variation for kids of our 5-Element shake recipe (included in all of our healthy living kits). If you are interested, you can email us at info@miracle-body.com for the free recipe.
Do you offer multivitamins and other nutritional supplements other then what is listed on the Miracle Body website?
Yes, we have a wide variety of nutritional supplements available for purchase on our Vitamin Pak website. You can save you a significant amount of money over what you would pay at a health food store or vitamin store at
www.Vitamin-Pak.com .
Why Soy Protein?
There is some controversy about the best type of protein powder.
Scientists agree that foods rich in soy protein can have considerable value
to heart health, a fact backed by dozens of controlled clinical studies. A
yearlong review of the available human studies in 1999 prompted FDA to allow
a health claim on food labels stating that a daily diet containing 25 grams
of soy protein, also low in saturated fat and cholesterol, may reduce the
risk of heart disease.
Much of the research to date has examined dietary soy in the form of whole foods such as tofu, "soymilk," or as soy protein added to foods, and the public health community mostly concurs that these whole foods can be worthwhile additions to a healthy diet.
The recently raised concerns, however, focus on specific components of soy, such as the soy isoflavones daidzein and genistein, not the whole food or intact soy protein. These chemicals, available over the counter in pills and powders, are often advertised as dietary supplements for use by women to help lessen menopausal symptoms such as hot flashes.
The problem, researchers say, is that isoflavones are phytoestrogens, a weak form of estrogen that could have a drug-like effect in the body. This may be pronounced in postmenopausal women, and some studies suggest that high isoflavone levels might increase the risk of cancer, particularly breast cancer.
Research data, however, is far from conclusive, and some studies show just the opposite--that under some conditions, soy may help prevent breast cancer. It is this scientific conundrum, where evidence simultaneously points to benefits and possible risks, that is causing some researchers to urge caution.
Unlike the controversy surrounding soy isoflavones, available evidence on soy protein benefits is much clearer. That's why FDA limited its health claim to foods containing intact soy protein. The claim does not extend to isolated substances from soy protein such as the isoflavones genistein and daidzein.

