Pseudo-science, disingenuousness, and quackary should be illegal, but they are not. They even get rewarded in certain cases.
I believe, as Jotronic pointed out, that laser comb sales and useless in-office laser treatments by physicians will skyrocket in the coming years. One only has to look at the success of the bogus hair regrowth formulations that are sold over radio and tv daily to see the bright future for laser "therapy".
Very unfortunate.
Marketing products that don't demonstrate any true clinical efficacy is nothing new, but the laser comb breaks new ground in that now PHYSICIANS have become openly complicit. I for one am very disappointed in the doctors that are selling this form of "therapy" to patients and hope that they will someday be held accountable.
Jotronic's motivation in exposing laser treatments is to protect the consumer from paying thousands of dollars for a useless treatment.
My motivation is to protect the trust that the public has placed in physicians in general, and hair transplant doctors in particular. Doctors who sell this "therapy" put that trust in danger for all of us."