The bogus home cures for COVID-19 are showing up all over.
Fortunately
most wonʻt hurt you, and some might even ease symptoms a little, but not cure
you. That said, some of these crazy "cures" can kill you.
Hereʻs one
lie: Gargling with salt water will wash the disease out of your throat and
youʻll be better. Or gargling with warm salt water and vinegar will kill the
virus.
Simple logic
reminds you that the virus isnʻt only in your throat. Itʻs also in your nasal
passages, in your lungs, in your blood, and even in feces. Gargling isnʻt going
to have any impact on most of those locations.
Gargling with
or drinking bleach, which some have suggested, has the additional downside of
being dangerous as well as ineffective. It can burn your throat and stomach, it
can collapse your blood pressure, it can put you into a coma. Donʻt do it. Hereʻs some information from the New York State health office. Also, wiping or
spraying down your body with a bleach solution may clean your skin, but it wonʻt
have an impact on the disease inside you.
Eating garlic
or drinking garlic soup might keep people away from you due to the smell—which
is an interesting take on social distancing—but thereʻs no evidence it helps
with the disease. Here is that one and a few other myths from the World Health
Organizationʻs website.
Drinking
large amounts of alcohol or water wonʻt prevent or stop the disease. The World
Health Organizationʻs twitter feed debunks these theories.
There are
predatory personalities online, on radio and on TV who promote bogus cures of
several kinds. Often, youʻll find theyʻre selling their special
"cure." Theyʻre getting rich on the backs of the sick. Some have
already been told by government agencies to stop with the fake cures.
Fortunately,
there are several websites that are actively responding to malicious and erroneous
medical information about this outbreak. Hereʻs one.
The upshot:
donʻt do stupid stuff just because some stranger (or even a friend) told you it
might work.
If you do get
sick, here are some tips from the professionals at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
See our previous pieces on this disease:
Fake news: Stuff people are staying thatʻs just bull.
Kaua`i has its first confirmed cases, and debunking fake news--folks, the barges are still coming.
See our previous pieces on this disease:
Fake news: Stuff people are staying thatʻs just bull.
Kaua`i has its first confirmed cases, and debunking fake news--folks, the barges are still coming.
© Jan TenBruggencate 2020
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