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The toxic bleach known as MMS, promoted through marginal activists as a miracle cure, has played a role in at least seven deaths in the United States, according to new figures.
The statistic was published through the Colombian government of the detention of Mark Grenon, one of the main defenders of MMS, also known as The Miracle Mineral Solution.
Grenon is sought in the United States at rates similar to the MMS promotion unlike COVID-19. He was arrested after Colombia won an extradition request.
In a series of tweets, Colombia’s attorney general said the agents had arrested Grenon and one of his sons for extradition to the United States.
In the tweets, he said the substance promoted through men “would have the deaths of 7 U.S. citizens.”
The messages did not explicitly cite a source for the figure. Such data would come from officials of the country requesting extradition.
However, this is the first time that a total has been proposed through an official framework for the number of deaths similar to MMS intake.
People who take it report painful but non-fatal consequences.
As a component of a 2019 MMS investigation, Business Insider experienced two deaths in the United States similar to the substance. Colombia’s figures that the toll is higher.
The Food and Drug Administration, which according to Business Insider, initiated a special investigation into false remedies opposed to COVID-19, did respond to a request for comment on the figure cited through the Colombian authorities.
MMS is truly chlorine dioxide, a poisonous bleach that is not unusually used in the commercial water remedy or textile bleach. It is created by mixing sodium chlorite with an unusual acid, although infrequently feeds directly.
Previously, U.S. Drug and Food Administration and medicine experts They had warned that chlorine dioxide intake could kill.
In 2019, the FDA renewed its knowledge of not taking the substance after an increase in other people’s reports.
The report said it had gained reports that the substance causes severe vomiting, diarrhoea and life-threatening hypotension, and that in high doses it can be fatal.
You did not authorize its substance as a remedy for any conditions.
MmS supporters reject warnings like those of the FDA in a conspiracy involving media organizations and pharmaceutical corporations that need to suppress news about their effectiveness.
During the 2019 investigation, Business Insider presented FDA documents showing two deaths in which MMS intake is a factor.
Other reports included injuries, as well as fatal problems at the center, chronic abdominal pain and vomiting.
Twenty-three court cases about the substance in an FDA database used to record adverse reactions to those products. Of these, two were killed and four were classified as “fatal.”
One of the court cases similar to the death of American woman Sylvia Nash, who died on a yacht off the Vanuatu Islands in the South Pacific in 2009 after MMS to protect itself from malaria.
Another complainant claimed the substance was a fact in the death in 2013 of a 48-year-old anonymous woman who suffered a “big bowel prick” after taking the substance.