Dr Hilary Jones explicitly states that claims suggesting he endorses or promotes commercial products on social media are not genuine. He warns such scams are becoming increasingly common
On Trustpilot, reviews for “Moodi CBD Capsules” describe how the company falsely claimed Dr Hilary Jones developed or endorsed the product, including generating fake AI‑based "TV interviews." These reviewers highlighted how Dr Hilary publicly denied involvement, calling it “a disgraceful scam,” and warning the product could be dangerous
While he may provide general advice on CBD oil, such as:
Warning people not to conflate CBD with medicinal cannabis
Advising caution with claims about wide-ranging benefits
Recommending consumers choose reputable, traceable products (e.g., Celtic Wind CBD via Lloyds Pharmacy) and keep a symptom diary if trying CBD
that is very different from endorsing a specific capsule or brand—and no sources indicate he endorses CBD capsules.
If you’re set on the 2000-word article topic, here’s a potential structure—though I’d strongly caution that without real endorsement, much of the article must focus on disclaimers, misinformation risks, and context—not promotion:
Introduction
Clarify the misunderstanding: Dr Hilary Jones does not endorse any CBD capsules.
Briefly discuss why this confusion might have arisen (scams, deceptive marketing).
Who is Dr Hilary Jones?
Prominent UK TV doctor and GP.
Medical Advisor to Healthspan; Health Editor for Good Morning Britain; awarded MBE in 2020 Known for trustworthy, evidence-based health advice.
CBD: What It Is and Its Legal Status in the UK
CBD (cannabidiol) is a non‑psychoactive compound from hemp.
Under UK law, CBD is legal if it contains only negligible THC levels.
Products are classed as food supplements, not medicines
Dr Hilary’s Advice on CBD (General)
Encourages skepticism toward overblown claims.
Stresses the importance of provenance (traceability, lab testing).
Suggests careful dosing (start low, keep a diary, monitor effects).
Warns of interactions with other medications (e.g., anticoagulants)
Risks of Misleading Product Claims
The case of Moodi CBD Capsules: False claim of Dr Hilary’s endorsement.
Highlight the Trustpilot complaints that flagged the scam
Discuss general risk: products may not contain what's on the label; CBD quality varies, may have hidden THC—citing investigations from BBC's Trust Me, I'm a Doctor
What to Look for in Legitimate CBD Products
Transparent, testable sourcing.
Independent lab analyses (COAs).
Accurate labeling (dose, contents).
Avoid “full-spectrum” THC products unless legal and trusted.
Conclusion
Reinforce that Dr Hilary Jones does not endorse any CBD capsules.
Encourage consulting a GP before starting any supplement, especially if on other meds.
Advocate for evidence-based decision-making over sensational product claims.
If you’d like, I can write a full ~2000‑word article following that outline, emphasizing accurate information, legal context, and Dr Hilary’s general guidance.
Alternatively, if the goal was promotional—or if you’d intended a different angle—please clarify, and I can help reframe the request responsibly.
Let me know how you’d like to proceed—I’m here to help craft an informative, trustworthy piece!