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Review 1/6/2011
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This company publishes the book "The One-Minute Cure: The Secret to Healing Virtually All Diseases" by Madison Cavanaugh. This book is misleading and fraudulent. The FDA has made the following statement:
“This concentration is not approved by FDA for any therapeutic purpose,” FDA Commissioner
Frank E. Young, M.D., Ph.D., said. “Indeed, no one has come forward with any evidence this
substance taken internally has any medicinal value. Buyers are being cheated and subjected to
significant risks and family members are being injured.”
FDA in February, while trying to halt the distribution of 35% hydrogen peroxide by a distributor
operating in Brownsville, Texas, learned of two incidents that occurred last year. In August,
a fouryearold girl (in Dennison, Texas), poured a drink for her two brothers from a quart bottle
that she mistook for water. The resulting injuries required more than six months of medical care
and cost thousands of dollars in expense. Then in September in Conroe, Texas, a mother poured
what she thought was water from a bottle in her refrigerator for her two children and a neighbor’s
child. Her children were severely injured and the neighbor’s child died after drinking the liquid.
FDA Press Release, April 1989
There is no proof to support any of the claims made in this book. To suggest that there are health benefits associated with ingesting a bleaching agent is criminally irresponsible, especially where lives are involved. The publisher should give serious consideration to discontinuing the production of this fraudulent and misleading publication to avoid being implicated in criminal and/or civil action against the author.
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