In the spirit of ongoing education......

Dan


PRESS RELEASE 

P89-18
Food and Drug Administration
Mike Shaffer - (301) 443-3285

The Food and Drug Administration warned today that industrial strength 
hydrogen peroxide illegally promoted to treat AIDS and cancer has caused at 
least one death in Texas and several injuries requiring hospitalization.

The products are sold as "35% Food Grade Hydrogen Peroxide" to be diluted and 
used in "Hyperoxygenation Therapy" for AIDS, cancer, and more than 60 other 
conditions. FDA said there is no proof that either the product or the therapy 
has any medicinal value.

Further, the agency said, this concentration - more than ten times as strong 
as the 3 percent solution commonly used to disinfect minor cuts - is highly 
corrosive. FDA considers it dangerous even if it is handled according to the 
manufacturer�s directions.

�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.�

The liquid is purchased in bulk from chemical plants in Texas and Mexico, and 
repackaged into smaller containers by distributors. Stored in home 
refrigerators according to the manufacturer�s instruction, the corrosive 
chemical has been mistaken for water and consumed.

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 fouryear-old 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.

The agency said the products - sometimes called �Biowater� and �H2O2� - are 
promoted as an �alternative medicine� by mail-order distributors in 
Wisconsin, Minnesota, California, and Texas, and by some �health food� 
outlets. The concentrated liquid comes in pint, quart, and gallon containers 
with ordinary screw caps, or, in some cases, with child-resistant caps.

Literature usually distributed with the product explains how to dilute the 
concentrated liquid for such unproved or unnecessary uses as sprouting seeds, 
purifying meat, cleansing laundry, and treating acne, gum disease, athlete�s 
foot, colic, headache, varicose veins, AIDS and cancer.

Materials promoting the product often include printed pages resembling 
magazine articles along with alleged testimonials that blend various medical 
facts with fictitious claims and offer the view that hydrogen peroxide�s 
benefits are suppressed by the medical establishment and the government.

The promotion of hydrogen peroxide as a home remedy has continued and has 
reappeared despite efforts of FDA beginning in 1985 to get distributors of 35 
percent hydrogen peroxide to stop making the illegal claims. FDA is not aware 
of any medical benefits from consuming hydrogen peroxide in any form; no 
information or applications have been submitted to the agency to support any 
drug claims for taking this chemical internally.

Danger: Hydrogen Peroxide solutions are strong oxidizers and corrosive to the 
eyes, mucous membranes and skin. Consult the MSDS for the appropriate 
Personal Protective Equipment to wear when handling hydrogen peroxide. In 
case of contact with the eyes, skin or clothing, flush with large amounts of 
water for 15 minutes. In case of ingestion, sit upright, drink large 
quantities of water to dilute the stomach contents and seek immediate medical 
attention. See MSDS for additional information.



To our actual knowledge, the information contained herein is accurate as of 
the date of this document. However, neither Solvay Interox, Inc. nor any of 
its affiliates makes any warranty, expressed or implied, or accepts any 
liability in connection with this information or its use. This information is 
for use by technically skilled persons at their own discretion and risk and 
does not relate to the use of this product in combination with any other 
substance or any other process. This is not a license under any patent. The 
user alone must finally determine suitability of any information or material 
for any contemplated use, the manner of use and whether any patents are 
infringed.

TRADEMARKS: CAPA�, ENVIROFirst�, FB�, IXPER�, PAK�, PFP�, PicoPack�, 
PicoPure�, Proxitane�, Ultra Cosmetic�,
WW-12�, and/or the trade name of other Solvay Interox products referenced 
herein are either trademarks or registered
trademarks of Solvay Interox, Inc.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Solvay Interox, Inc.
1-800-INTEROX
Copyright 2000, Solvay Interox, Inc.
All Rights Reserved. revised 3-1-00
HH-208 (8/96)


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