Active since Jul 2018
I paid for a bed in November already. They took a deposit of R20000 from me now they ducking and diving. Mr Ramon van Rooyen disappeared from the planet and none of their offices answer their phones.
These are **** artists that collect your information and sell it on the dark web. Dont even give them your id no.
These are private information collectors and ****artists. Dont give them any details about you not even your id number. They sell your details on the dark web/
Beware of fusion trade, fusion consulting. They were nice and attentive when i deposit money for ai trading. I saw the money being made but when i wanted to withdraw it their was a resistance. I told them to put it in my luno wallet but was deposited in a **** coin that could not be redeemed. They then tried to swindel me out of another usd1600 They said apparently blockchain wants me to put the money in for a liqudation. When i looked under the UK registar they opened and closed under 4 different names. BEWARE.
I have a major concern with Sleepnet, their machines and there frankly poor after sales service. Having spent the night at a sleep clinic, awake most of the time, I was told that I had severe sleep apnoea and was marketed a machine from sleepnet. The machine I ended up purchasing is an Air Sense 10 Elite, with breathing mask, which set me back R10 500; a small fortune to be sure. First of all, research (done in retrospect) suggests that my sleep apnoea is not severe but moderate and that there exist alternative therapies which were not discussed with me. Much less invasive and cost effective methods like: nasal decongestant, oral appliances, weight loss and positional therapy; ranging in price from, nothing at all, to a relatively nominal fee. It is hard not to wonder why I was immediately marketed an invasive and expensive breathing machine before having at least been offered the alternative options to experiment with; after all my sleep apnoea is not a life and death situation. Is there a kick-back system happening here? I can’t say with any cer*****y but the situation does hint at the dubious. After ten nightmarish nights of using the machine and despite the best efforts of the sleep clinic and Sleepnet trying to convince me that I would eventually get used to the mask or expire without it, the battle was over, the mask had won. If there are people who can abide the sheer discomfort of trying to sleep with the mask on and it benefits them, I am happy for them. Unfortunately for me, the gravest claustrophobic dread encloses me when I even think of using the machine and putting that mask on. Instead of improving my sleep, the use of the machine did the opposite and made it near impossible. I could only sleep in micro naps; that edgy kind of sleep where you are on the brink of sheer exhaustion but compelled to be awake. In other words-unadulterated torture! Since I have ceased using the machine and begun practicing some new positional sleeping techniques, the pure relief of not having to use the machine and the pure exhaustion of having used it, delivered me the best eight hours of sleep I have ever had and since then, I continue to do so. I called Sleepnet to raise my concerns and to seek a return of the unit. I was told that they strictly do not do returns and that I had unwittingly signed some fine print at the time of purchase in support of this. I was told that I would have better luck trying to sell it on Gumtree; can you believe that level of haughtiness from a company that professes: “We offer unrivalled aftercare service, ensuring patient compliance, customer satisfaction and continuation of care.” Who are they trying to fool? It is quite patent that this fine print which I was made to sign is ominous at best. I suspect that Sleepnet is well aware of the general discomfort that their devices deliver, have probably been inundated with return requests and had installed the “no refunds” clause to ensure that the one way street of money flows forever in their favour. If this is not the case then why is all the fine print and red tape necessary? Are they truly interested in “customer satisfaction” or not? When I requested the opportunity to return the unit I was happy to make certain concessions. I was more than happy to forfeit the return of the mask for obvious hygiene reasons and was even willing to pay a reasonable handling fee to off-set the inconvenience of getting the unit back to Sleepnet. This was also just dismissed out of hand and the “unrivalled after care service” once again denigrated into what I think Sleepnet’s company catchphrase should actually be: sorry brother…but no refunds. How can one be expected to invest in a machine of ten thousand rand, which you need to walk a long road with but are given zero opportunity to test out- which is exactly what happens to all the suckers, myself included. I am starting to adopt this suspicion that sleep therapy would better be termed, sleep quackery. From the ear and nose “specialist” who charged me a thousand rand for a three minute consultation; to the sleep clinic they all referred me to; to the suppliers of breathing apparatus, who boast “customer satisfaction” but in fact couldn’t care less- I see a money game and kick-back ring just waiting to happen, if it isn’t already in play. Although we tend to trust so-called medical professionals, examples like this show you how important it is to do your own research and to question; never accept initial findings sheepishly less you be taken in and sucked dry.
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