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This article is a good reason to think twice about any supplements or any'natural' products available to you in health food stores. Many naturopaths get sucked in to the story, without truly research the references. This is not to say that all health food products are bad, however it is worth doing some real research and not just believing what you read or are told......
A century ago radioactivity was new, exciting and good for you--at least
if you believed the
people selling radium pendants for rheumatism, all-
natural radon water for vigor, uranium blankets for arthritis and
thorium-laced medicine for
digestion (you don't even want to know about the
radioactive suppositories).
Crazy, huh? Until I ran into the fascinating book Living with Radiation,
the First Hundred
Years, self-published by Paul Frame and William Kolb, I
had no idea that radiation was the basis for a huge quack-medicine
industry that lasted for
decades and took in millions.
Today we know that exposing yourself to radiation is a bad idea. Even
when radiation is used
to treat cancer, its deadliness is what does the work,
killing cancer cells at a slightly higher rate than normal cells.
But imagine yourself 100 years ago, before many of the first researchers
studying
radioactivity had died of cancer or other radiation-induced causes.
Electricity had been discovered relatively recently, and it turned out
to be perfectly safe in
moderation, so why not radiation?
In fact, early discoveries made plenty of reasonable people think that
radiation could be
good for you. Natural hot springs have been used as health
spas for thousands of years; even today, vacationers flock to their
healing (well, maybe)
waters. When scientists went around with radiation
detectors, they discovered that the waters from quite a few well-known
hot springs were
radioactive. (Radon gas produced by the decay of thorium and
uranium deep in the earth permeates the water at many natural hot
springs.)
Since no one really knew what made them healthful, the springs'
radioactivity was as good a
guess as any. Entrepreneurs started bottling the water
and selling it as "Radon Water." But rivals soon pointed out a problem:
Radon's half-life is
just 3.82 days. By the time the bottle reached the
customer, most of the radiation would be gone.
You might go so far as to say that Radon Water was a rip-off, which is
exactly the pitch the
Radium Ore Revigator company used to sell its "better,"
"more scientific" product: a watercooler lined with a serious amount of
carnotite, an ore of
uranium and radium that undergoes radioactive decay,
yielding radon gas. Storing any water in this cooler overnight would
give you fresh, potent,
invigorating radon water to drink by morning.
Unfortunately for those who used them, Revigators actually worked.
(Today, of course, we
run as fast as we can from radon; ridding basements of it is
a big business.)
Many of the radioactive products marketed at the time, such as uranium
blankets, contained
radioactive materials, but at such low levels that they
probably did little harm to consumers. But over time, companies started
producing ever
more powerful devices, most of them based on radium, the
element with the strongest marketing appeal. The supremely scary
Radiendocrinator was a
2-inch by 3-inch case that contained paper infused with 250
microcuries of radium, enough to illuminate a fluorescent screen placed
near it. It was meant
to be placed over--the very thought makes me shudder--
the endocrine glands.
As the industry developed, it gave birth to the inevitable wave of
fraudulent
products--fraudulent in the sense that they did not emit the high
levels of radiation they claimed to. This led to a couple of the more
surreal aspects of the
whole episode: advertisements that positively guaranteed
that a company's products exposed you to the full dose of radiation
promised, and instances
of the government shutting down companies selling
perfectly safe phony products instead of the real (deadly) items they
claimed to be
offering.
For example, the Bailey Radium Laboratories of East Orange, New Jersey,
offered $1,000
to anyone who could prove that its "Certified Radioactive
Water," sold under the brand name Radithor, did not contain the large
amount of radium and
thorium it claimed to. Alas, Radithor was the real thing:
No one ever claimed the prize. But Radithor did claim at least one life,
that of the well-known
industrialist, playboy and three-bottle-a-day
Radithor user Eben Byers. Byers's gruesome death in 1932 inspired the
Wall Street Journal
headline "The Radium Water Worked Fine until His Jaw Came
Off."
Byers's death also prompted the newly formed FDA to crack down on
radioactive health
products, insisting on proof of their safety and effectiveness.
Since they were neither, this had the effect of putting manufacturers
out of business.
Although low-radioactivity devices continued to slip through
regulatory cracks until well into the 1960s, the era of dangerously
radioactive quack cures
essentially went to the grave with Eben Byers.
The radium mania was a crazy little episode in the world of medicine,
but it was not at all out
of the ordinary. Pain and suffering have always
helped foster an uncritical market for remedies and preventatives.
Quacks and profiteers
are quick to pick up on the latest discoveries and promote
them to the desperate-for-a-cure market, regardless of how remote the
connection
between the discovery and any likely health benefits might be.
Irradiating yourself in the hope of feeling better was no nuttier than,
say, drinking a few
teaspoons of plain water as medicine, which is called
homeopathy and is extremely popular today.
These fads, old and new, tend to make remarkably similar claims, using
the same arguments
and marketing methods. Take a look, for instance, at the
following passage, from a 1928 Radium-ore Revigator brochure, and see if
it has a familiar
ring:
Is radio-activity dangerous to the health? Most everyone offers this
questions [sic] because
it is only natural to regard this as a drug or medicine.
The answer is that radio-activity is not a medicine or drug, but a
natural element of water,
and that since practically all spring and well water
that Nature herself gives for drinking purposes contain this highly
effective beneficial
element, it is but common sense to restore it to water that
has lost it just as we restore oxygen to a stuffy room by opening a
window. . . . The United
States Government says that the radio-activity of
natural water is never strong enough to be injurious.
In short, (1) what we're selling is "natural," unlike those potent
medicines your doctor
prescribes; (2) maybe you are not getting enough of this
natural substance; and (3) the government hasn't stopped us (yet).
Remember, they're
talking about radon gas.
You could find a paragraph almost identical to this one in any health
food store today. Here's
an example taken from the Web site of a more
contemporary product designed to help your, um, vigor:
Is Nymphomax safe?
Because Nymphomax is an all natural nutritional supplement containing
only the finest
botanicals, there are no harmful side effects when taken as
directed. Nymphomax is not a pharmaceutical drug and contains none of
the synthetic
chemicals found in prescription medications. It is a safe
alternative to prescription drugs, which can sometimes have serious side
effects.
Now, I'm not saying herbal medicines are as harmful as radiation, simply
that promoting them
as "all natural" tells you absolutely nothing about
whether they are safe, effective, both or neither. What matters is
what's in the pill, not how
it got there. There may be all kinds of herbal
medicines that are safe and effective--just don't expect the industry,
or the government,
to tell you which ones.
Amazingly, current federal law (the Dietary Supplement Health and
Education Act of 1994)
specifically orders the FDA to keeps its hands off virtually
all herbal medicines, preventing it from regulating the claims,
ingredients or safety of these
preparations and forbidding it to require the tracking
of side effects and deaths caused by them. And although the FDA banned
ephedra after
several high-profile deaths, it will probably take many more
such tragedies before the law is changed to allow the agency to clamp
down on other
dangerous products.
Radon Water was harmless because it contained nothing, the radiation
having vanished
before it reached customers. Amusingly, this has an exact
analogue in modern homeopathic remedies. Homeopathy "works" by dilution:
Preparations of
powerful substances are diluted, then diluted again and
again and again until there is almost no chance that even a single
molecule of the original
substance remains in the final "medicine." These nostrums
are sold to the public at top dollar, labeled with their original
starting-point ingredients just
as if they still contained any of them.
So don't for a minute think that we're all smarter and more modern than
those idiots eating
radium 100 years ago: Homeopathy is a huge industry
today, and it is every bit as nutty. Once people suspend their critical
thinking skills and go for hope over reality, the sky's the limit in silly
and dangerous medicine.
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