If I offended either of you,
@Sherri786 or
@RichL, I do apologize. I realize my original post wasn't clear: I was commenting on growing practice of mixing blogging and marketing, not the practice of oil pulling itself. As you suggested, RichL, anyone could go to a market, buy some coconut oil and give it a try.
I don't think alternative medicine is uniformly frowned on at TT, although not all support it -- which is OK. It is not necessarily a matter of being negative. We are allowed different opinions. Tinnitus Talk even has a separate forum for alternative treatments and many people post there, including me. I myself have tried/am trying alternatives: acupuncture (which some people on this board have called a scam) and supplements. If you try oil pulling, I am sure people here would be interested in the results. There are limited traditional treatment options for tinnitus, so other paths are often all we have.
I do, however, stand by the original intent of my post: that I am concerned about the growing number of blogs or wellness web sites posing as legitimate sources of unbiased information when, in fact, they are selling products or being paid for reviews. I extend my skepticism to "patient testimonials" on mainstream medical product sites. When I was researching Neuromonics, I skipped right past the patient stories on the company's site. Why should I believe anything written by people who are hand-picked by Neuromonics or paid by them? Instead, I talked to Neuromonics users on this board and here locally while making my decision.
Again, apologies for my miscommunication, and best to you both.