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The artist and Dj Natalia Paris published a press release on her official Instagram account to refer to the controversy that broke out after she recommended the use of chlorine dioxide to treat covid-19.
“To all public opinion, I want to state that in my social networks I have never publicized, promoted, promoted or commercialized the product: chlorine dioxide since January 25,” said the Dj from Antioquia.
Paris added: “Only on one occasion did I make a comment (not a post) on the Instagram app, about a Send From a video published on Sunday, January 24 of this year, responding to one of my followers, who asked me why on a yacht where we were 8 (eight) people we did not have masks, my answer was that we had ingested such a substance , and I invited her to investigate, an exercise which I did but in the middle of the task I found that the product does not have a health license and sales authorization “.
(Further: Natalia Paris is ordered not to publish information on chlorine dioxide)
The comment Paris refers to has already been deleted. “I received a letter from the Superintendency of Industry and Commerce, who told me that I should do what was pertinent and I did not hesitate to do so. It is essential to be clear that we must consume products with sanitary registration and / or Invima registration, follow their recommendations, and abide by the measures, since they are the entity that regulates us, “he said.
The model also stated that, therefore, it is important to refrain from consuming products that are not guaranteed and without legal records as such.
Paris also pointed out that all the products it sells on its official site have legal regulations for their sale and consumption.
(Too: Natalia Paris and other celebrities in trouble for ‘miraculous products’)
Thus the controversy was unleashed
The Antioqueña uploaded a video to Instagram this weekend where she is seen as a DJ at a party in a boat in which neither she nor her companions wear masks. One of her followers questioned her about the lack of that protection measure. She answered: “We all take chlorine dioxide. It is the remedy that saves you from getting vaccinated”.
In other answers she posted, Paris insists that by taking this chemical “no one will get covid-19 disease” and asks whoever questioned her to give it to her family. The businesswoman, in fact, is the one who claims that Samir Namen sells this substance.
The Invima, however, is clear in pointing out that the dioxide only has a sanitary registration as a surface disinfectant in the clinical field, but never as a medicine, much less with an indication for covid-19. Its use, therefore, is considered fraudulent when it is marketed for human consumption.
The Colombian health authority last May had already issued a health alert warning of the risks that this substance implies for people’s health.
(Follow with: The Chlorine Dioxide Scam: Know Its Lies and Risks)
The Food and Drug Administration of the United States (FDA) also warns that the consumption of this product can mean adverse effects such as respiratory failure; changes in the electrical activity of the heart; low blood pressure caused by dehydration; acute liver failure; low blood cell count and vomiting and severe diarrhea.
In the same sense, the National Agency for Medicines, Food and Medical Technology (Anmat), of Argentina; and the Institute of Public Health (ISP) of Chile. In the past, Health Canada, the Spanish Agency for Medicines and Health Products, the French Agency for the Safety of Health Products and the UK Food Standards Agency have warned about the risks of ingesting this product.
Legal implications
The Superintendency of Industry and Commerce (SIC) ordered the model Natalia Paris last Wednesday to stop sharing content on her social networks that recommend the consumption of chlorine dioxide to treat or avoid the coronavirus and other evils. This, after the Antioqueña affirmed on Instagram that this substance dangerous to health was “the remedy that saves you from getting vaccinated.”
Specifically, the SIC orders Paris to “immediately cease” the promotion of this product “and withdraw the comments in which it invited people to consume it to prevent contagion” with the new coronavirus.
In resolution 21-33907, the SIC also asked the businesswoman to “provide all the information about the laboratory that makes chlorine dioxide that it promotes on its social networks and to indicate whether the recommended product has a health registration.”
(Watch: The mega-party for which Natalia Paris is criticized on social networks)
ELTIEMPO.COM
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