Clorox says please don't bathe in Clorox like Mrs. Cuomo

Legion

Oderint dum metuant
tumblr_m0fbtr3wPI1qccp2lo1_500.gif




Do Not Bathe In Clorox Like Cristina Cuomo Has Been Doing

In a post on her Goop-like wellness blog Purist, Cuomo shared a laundry list of holistic methods she is using to tackle the coronavirus, including a “body charger” borrowed from a friend that sends electrical frequencies through the body, a vitamin drip done by a doctor who makes house calls to the Hamptons and what appears to be billions of milligrams of vitamins.

Yet one method rang decidedly unnatural: bathing in Clorox.

“Both days, I added 1/2 cup of Clorox to my bathwater to combat the radiation and metals in my system and oxygenate it,” she wrote of her routine.

If you’re thinking, “Um, come again?” you’re not alone. Bleach doesn’t seem like something we should be bathing in, pandemic or otherwise ― right? Right??

She is, it appears, not the only one curious about or engaging in the practice.

The Clorox website is clear about where it stands on the matter: No, it is not recommended to bathe in bleach. It details a scenario in which bleach is added to drinking water as treatment ― but that’s 1/8 of a teaspoon ― and to be used only in an emergency. “Using a bleach and water solution for bathing is not approved by the EPA and should not be done,” it states.

A doctor of infectious diseases in Blue York state said he didn’t even really know what to say about what he called “not mainstream or evidence-based medicine,” but explained that while bleach is an effective tool for decontaminating surfaces like, say, a bathtub, it is not advised to bathe with, and in fact could cause more harm than good.

Or, as Dr. Jennifer Gunter put it:

I still don’t understand how this isn’t parody. I just can’t even. https://t.co/5p8fYzI5dw
— Jennifer Gunter (@DrJenGunter) April 23, 2020


https://www.huffpost.com/entry/cristina-cuomo-clorox-coronavirus_l_5ea1e30ec5b60f4ac13f4914?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ29vZ2xlLmNvLnVrLw&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAIbeXqkRpfKS4t7DKbQRrXuSoiTiRejGqzYbVjxTknkzzot-QU0FWQrDoAVjpKG1Z14IZnl0w6Zza97Q9hpnXJ9QkbXO2ktsDcEe5IMHW7gaCtzUkeCdvIsSeK1K8JZPfO3932fUi2K1jSLtrmHlBsWEhdt36rl6iB3QF4b7o1HQ
 
tumblr_m0fbtr3wPI1qccp2lo1_500.gif




Do Not Bathe In Clorox Like Cristina Cuomo Has Been Doing

In a post on her Goop-like wellness blog Purist, Cuomo shared a laundry list of holistic methods she is using to tackle the coronavirus, including a “body charger” borrowed from a friend that sends electrical frequencies through the body, a vitamin drip done by a doctor who makes house calls to the Hamptons and what appears to be billions of milligrams of vitamins.

Yet one method rang decidedly unnatural: bathing in Clorox.

“Both days, I added 1/2 cup of Clorox to my bathwater to combat the radiation and metals in my system and oxygenate it,” she wrote of her routine.

If you’re thinking, “Um, come again?” you’re not alone. Bleach doesn’t seem like something we should be bathing in, pandemic or otherwise ― right? Right??

She is, it appears, not the only one curious about or engaging in the practice.

The Clorox website is clear about where it stands on the matter: No, it is not recommended to bathe in bleach. It details a scenario in which bleach is added to drinking water as treatment ― but that’s 1/8 of a teaspoon ― and to be used only in an emergency. “Using a bleach and water solution for bathing is not approved by the EPA and should not be done,” it states.

A doctor of infectious diseases in Blue York state said he didn’t even really know what to say about what he called “not mainstream or evidence-based medicine,” but explained that while bleach is an effective tool for decontaminating surfaces like, say, a bathtub, it is not advised to bathe with, and in fact could cause more harm than good.

Or, as Dr. Jennifer Gunter put it:

I still don’t understand how this isn’t parody. I just can’t even. https://t.co/5p8fYzI5dw
— Jennifer Gunter (@DrJenGunter) April 23, 2020


https://www.huffpost.com/entry/cristina-cuomo-clorox-coronavirus_l_5ea1e30ec5b60f4ac13f4914?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ29vZ2xlLmNvLnVrLw&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAIbeXqkRpfKS4t7DKbQRrXuSoiTiRejGqzYbVjxTknkzzot-QU0FWQrDoAVjpKG1Z14IZnl0w6Zza97Q9hpnXJ9QkbXO2ktsDcEe5IMHW7gaCtzUkeCdvIsSeK1K8JZPfO3932fUi2K1jSLtrmHlBsWEhdt36rl6iB3QF4b7o1HQ

Priceless :laugh:
 
Cristina Cuomo posts insanely privileged list of coronavirus ‘remedies’

giphy.gif




If you thought the antics of CNN blowhard Fredo Cuomo could get any more cringe-worthy — his wife, Cristina, has put together a list of preposterous privileged preparations she used to battle COVID-19, including a vitamin IV drip, Peruvian tree bark and bleach baths.

Cristina, who herself was diagnosed with coronavirus, posted an eye-popping blog titled “The Cuomos’ Corona Protocol” on the website thepuristonline.com, saying, “Here’s what I did to push it out over the week,” adding this is “an opportunity to learn how to keep the immune system up.”

Proving herself to be the Gwyneth Paltrow of herbal medicine, Cristina’s list of supplements not exactly accessible to the common consumer include “Peruvian bark … essential to oxygenate the blood”; glutathione powder, an antioxidant; the medicinal florals xanthium — used to combat allergies and which some Chinese herbalists warn is toxic — and magnolia, used to reduce anxiety and inflammation; plus viracid, which includes black elderberries to boost the immune system.

Even though her CNN anchor husband, Fredo — the brother of Blue York Governor Homo Cuomo — was universally panned for his melodramatic exit from COVID quarantine this week, it gets worse.

“When my sinus congestion was painful, I enlisted Dr. Roxanna Namavar from Pretty Healthy NYC, who also does vitamin drips at home in the Hamptons,” she wrote. “She shows up in her full hazmat outfit and 3M mask. I got magnesium, NAC (a precursor to glutathione, said to be very helpful against COVID-19), vitamin C with lysine, proline, and B complex, folic acid, zinc, selenium, glutathione and caffeine (to combat the headache).”

In what reads like a piece from The Onion, Cristina adds, “Both days, I added ½ cup of Clorox to my bathwater to combat the radiation and metals in my system and oxygenate it.”

However, doctors say bleach can trigger asthma and other breathing problems, and it is not recommended for skin.

Delving further into pseudo-science, she writes, “I used a ‘body charger,’ which energy specialist Randy Oppitz suggested I borrow from a friend. It sent electrical frequencies through my body to oxygenate my blood and stimulate the healthy production of blood cells to fortify my immune system.”

“It also rebalanced my energy, which was gravely off from the stress of care-giving, catching the virus, fearing my kids would get it, etc,” she adds.

“The key to healing the human body is directly related to the body’s ability to allow energy to flow through it. ‘I discovered in my 40-year career as a personal energy specialist that every person I ever worked with has blocked energies. The Body Charger is a device that transfers energy, breaks up, and pulls out the low frequency while replacing with a higher rate,’ Oppitz told me.”

She goes on, “I also rented a PEMF (pulsed electromagnetic field) machine, which optimizes the ability of cells to start healing. It uses low-energy fields to stimulate the self-healing mechanisms of the cells after a physical injury or a viral attack on the body’s tissues or bones.”

Christina claims that it helps treat COVID-19 because “it increases the speed with which your lungs and whole body can recover.” She said she rented it from Stand Wellness in Water Mill for the month. “It is good to use for any ailment, at any time,” she writes. “I have used it in my office for the arthritis on my foot and for the inflammation Lyme disease caused my shoulders.”

Plus she made a “liver-cleansing beverage” with a raw garlic clove, orange, lemon, cayenne pepper, olive oil, ginger and turmeric.

Then back to the rarefied world of the Hamptons. “Every day this week, Chris and I both ate an Ayurveda lunch from chef Corey de Rosa at Tapovana in Bridgehampton; his menu treats food as medicine,” she writes. “Aside from improving digestion, Tapovana’s dishes are also nourishing and cleansing. They focus on having balanced proportions of essential healing micro (vitamins and minerals) and macro (proteins, carbs and fats) nutrients.”

Cristina finishes with her family’s meals for the week, which she describes as “food for medicine.” The food includes “Cabbage, asparagus — a kidney cleanser — and chayote sambar (chayote is a tropical squash that hydrates the body and is high in vitamin C), with a lentil stew; mango with cardamom and cashews, a tissue-builder that’s also delicious.”

Other menu items include “Pongal, made of mung beans and rice,” “rose lassi, a yogurt-based drink packed with natural probiotics,” and “mashed mung daal.”

We just want to know who does their grocery shopping.



https://pagesix.com/2020/04/23/cristina-cuomo-posts-list-of-out-of-touch-coronavirus-remedies/
 
Doctors warn against vitamin drips, Clorox baths after Cuomo touts them

tumblr_oqvea7MKNr1rxs4y3o1_400.gif




CNN anchor Fredo Cuomo's wife, Cristina, tested positive for COVID-19 and has since recovered.

But she revealed on her blog that she used some unconventional methods in her road to recovery that are raising concerns in the medical community.

Cuomo, who is the founder of the wellness website The Purist, detailed her methods in a new post titled, “The Cuomos’ Corona Protocol, Week 3.”

In the post, Cuomo revealed that she took Clorox baths and used vitamin drips, among other things, to try to speed up her recovery.

She wrote that a doctor who makes house calls came to her house in “a hazmat outfit and 3M mask” to administer the vitamin drip, which she says included vitamin C, magnesium, folic acid, and zinc.

Cuomo also detailed how she took bleach baths, adding "½ cup ONLY of Clorox" to her regular baths to help "combat the radiation and metals in my system and oxygenate it."

"We want to neutralize heavy metals because they slow-up the electromagnetic frequency of our cells, which is our energy field, and we need a good flow of energy," she wrote.

Cuomo appeared to anticipate disagreement over her post. She included a message “for those who disapprove of my trial-and-error efforts and my investment to keep myself strong and healthy: ‘Returning hate for hate multiplies hate, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate, only love can do that,’ said Martin Luther King Jr.,” she wrote.

Still, doctors warn that these alternative treatments and treatment ideas are all based on theory, not fact. “None of them have been proven, and some are dangerous,” Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist and professor at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine said.

There is “no evidence” that vitamin supplementation of any kind will help with recovery from COVID-19, infectious disease expert Dr. Amesh A. Adalja, senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, tells Yahoo Life. “Obviously, it’s a different story if you’re vitamin deficient but, for the average person who follows a regular diet, there is no evidence that vitamin supplementation will change the course of COVID-19,” Adalja says.

Adalja says that there’s “especially no evidence for vitamin drips.” Vitamin drips, which involve giving a patient a concentrated dose of vitamins through an IV, can be dangerous with a COVID-positive patient, Adalja says. Hospitals are currently encouraging patients who have contracted the virus to try to take any medication by mouth so that medical staff isn’t exposed to the virus when installing an IV, he explains. “Having a physician come to your house to administer a worthless IV drip doesn’t make sense to me,” he adds. “We’re not even doing that in hospitals for medications that people actually could use.”

Vitamin drips aren’t a harmless procedure for patients, either, Dr. Diane Calello, the executive medical director of New Jersey Poison Control at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, says. “Vitamin drips, just like oral vitamins, have not been proven to treat or prevent any viral infection,” she says. “This is also true of COVID-19. Injection of vitamins, or anything without proven benefit, can cause adverse health effects and can be dangerous.”

Vitamin drips can also lead to toxicity if they’re administered in too-high doses, especially if fat-soluble vitamins like vitamins A, D, E and K are used, Jamie Alan, an assistant professor of pharmacology and toxicology at Michigan State University, said.

Bleach baths are unlikely to do anything, either, and may even be harmful.

As a whole, disinfectants like bleach can be harmful if they’re applied to the skin, Alan says. “They are more dangerous to use on broken skin, but can potentially be harmful on intact skin, especially at high concentrations,” she says.

Diluted bleach baths have been used by medical practitioners before — they just aren’t recommended for patients with COVID-19, Dr. Richard Watkins, an infectious disease physician in Akron, Ohio and a professor of internal medicine at the Northeast Ohio Medical University, said. “Bleach baths are useful for patients with recurrent skin infections, such as from MRSA,” he says. “COVID-19 is a respiratory pathogen, so taking a bleach bath is not beneficial for it.”

Adalja agrees. “There is no evidence that taking a Clorox bath is helpful for COVID-19,” he says. “It’s unlikely to do anything.” Schaffner also says that even bleach baths that are done to combat MRSA and other skin conditions have to be done under strict conditions. “You have to be meticulous to make sure the concentration is not too high. You can get a burn if you exposure yourself to too-high a concentration,” he says.

Doctors aren’t impressed with Cuomo’s comments about the baths helping with energy fields, either. “Energy fields and magnetism are not recognized as legitimate concepts by mainstream medical practitioners in 2020,” Watkins says. “Nonsensical things of this nature were commonly believed in the 1800s, which was before most people understood valid scientific concepts and scientific knowledge was much more limited.”



https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/doctors-warn-against-dangerous-alternative-coronavirus-treatment-ideas-vitamin-drips-clorox-baths-180851538.html
 
The president isn't the one bathing in bleach.

No, he thinks Americans should inject disinfectants rather than bath in it, least bathing in it won't kill you, can't say the same for injecting it, and he's the President, well, least on paper
 
tumblr_oqvea7MKNr1rxs4y3o1_400.gif




CNN anchor Fredo Cuomo's wife, Cristina, tested positive for COVID-19 and has since recovered.

But she revealed on her blog that she used some unconventional methods in her road to recovery that are raising concerns in the medical community.

Cuomo, who is the founder of the wellness website The Purist, detailed her methods in a new post titled, “The Cuomos’ Corona Protocol, Week 3.”

In the post, Cuomo revealed that she took Clorox baths and used vitamin drips, among other things, to try to speed up her recovery.

She wrote that a doctor who makes house calls came to her house in “a hazmat outfit and 3M mask” to administer the vitamin drip, which she says included vitamin C, magnesium, folic acid, and zinc.

Cuomo also detailed how she took bleach baths, adding "½ cup ONLY of Clorox" to her regular baths to help "combat the radiation and metals in my system and oxygenate it."

"We want to neutralize heavy metals because they slow-up the electromagnetic frequency of our cells, which is our energy field, and we need a good flow of energy," she wrote.

Cuomo appeared to anticipate disagreement over her post. She included a message “for those who disapprove of my trial-and-error efforts and my investment to keep myself strong and healthy: ‘Returning hate for hate multiplies hate, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate, only love can do that,’ said Martin Luther King Jr.,” she wrote.

Still, doctors warn that these alternative treatments and treatment ideas are all based on theory, not fact. “None of them have been proven, and some are dangerous,” Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist and professor at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine said.

There is “no evidence” that vitamin supplementation of any kind will help with recovery from COVID-19, infectious disease expert Dr. Amesh A. Adalja, senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, tells Yahoo Life. “Obviously, it’s a different story if you’re vitamin deficient but, for the average person who follows a regular diet, there is no evidence that vitamin supplementation will change the course of COVID-19,” Adalja says.

Adalja says that there’s “especially no evidence for vitamin drips.” Vitamin drips, which involve giving a patient a concentrated dose of vitamins through an IV, can be dangerous with a COVID-positive patient, Adalja says. Hospitals are currently encouraging patients who have contracted the virus to try to take any medication by mouth so that medical staff isn’t exposed to the virus when installing an IV, he explains. “Having a physician come to your house to administer a worthless IV drip doesn’t make sense to me,” he adds. “We’re not even doing that in hospitals for medications that people actually could use.”

Vitamin drips aren’t a harmless procedure for patients, either, Dr. Diane Calello, the executive medical director of New Jersey Poison Control at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, says. “Vitamin drips, just like oral vitamins, have not been proven to treat or prevent any viral infection,” she says. “This is also true of COVID-19. Injection of vitamins, or anything without proven benefit, can cause adverse health effects and can be dangerous.”

Vitamin drips can also lead to toxicity if they’re administered in too-high doses, especially if fat-soluble vitamins like vitamins A, D, E and K are used, Jamie Alan, an assistant professor of pharmacology and toxicology at Michigan State University, said.

Bleach baths are unlikely to do anything, either, and may even be harmful.

As a whole, disinfectants like bleach can be harmful if they’re applied to the skin, Alan says. “They are more dangerous to use on broken skin, but can potentially be harmful on intact skin, especially at high concentrations,” she says.

Diluted bleach baths have been used by medical practitioners before — they just aren’t recommended for patients with COVID-19, Dr. Richard Watkins, an infectious disease physician in Akron, Ohio and a professor of internal medicine at the Northeast Ohio Medical University, said. “Bleach baths are useful for patients with recurrent skin infections, such as from MRSA,” he says. “COVID-19 is a respiratory pathogen, so taking a bleach bath is not beneficial for it.”

Adalja agrees. “There is no evidence that taking a Clorox bath is helpful for COVID-19,” he says. “It’s unlikely to do anything.” Schaffner also says that even bleach baths that are done to combat MRSA and other skin conditions have to be done under strict conditions. “You have to be meticulous to make sure the concentration is not too high. You can get a burn if you exposure yourself to too-high a concentration,” he says.

Doctors aren’t impressed with Cuomo’s comments about the baths helping with energy fields, either. “Energy fields and magnetism are not recognized as legitimate concepts by mainstream medical practitioners in 2020,” Watkins says. “Nonsensical things of this nature were commonly believed in the 1800s, which was before most people understood valid scientific concepts and scientific knowledge was much more limited.”



https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/doctors-warn-against-dangerous-alternative-coronavirus-treatment-ideas-vitamin-drips-clorox-baths-180851538.html

:laugh: :laugh: :laugh: Just keeps getting better!!!!!!
 
tumblr_m0fbtr3wPI1qccp2lo1_500.gif




Do Not Bathe In Clorox Like Cristina Cuomo Has Been Doing

In a post on her Goop-like wellness blog Purist, Cuomo shared a laundry list of holistic methods she is using to tackle the coronavirus, including a “body charger” borrowed from a friend that sends electrical frequencies through the body, a vitamin drip done by a doctor who makes house calls to the Hamptons and what appears to be billions of milligrams of vitamins.

Yet one method rang decidedly unnatural: bathing in Clorox.

“Both days, I added 1/2 cup of Clorox to my bathwater to combat the radiation and metals in my system and oxygenate it,” she wrote of her routine.

If you’re thinking, “Um, come again?” you’re not alone. Bleach doesn’t seem like something we should be bathing in, pandemic or otherwise ― right? Right??

She is, it appears, not the only one curious about or engaging in the practice.

The Clorox website is clear about where it stands on the matter: No, it is not recommended to bathe in bleach. It details a scenario in which bleach is added to drinking water as treatment ― but that’s 1/8 of a teaspoon ― and to be used only in an emergency. “Using a bleach and water solution for bathing is not approved by the EPA and should not be done,” it states.

A doctor of infectious diseases in Blue York state said he didn’t even really know what to say about what he called “not mainstream or evidence-based medicine,” but explained that while bleach is an effective tool for decontaminating surfaces like, say, a bathtub, it is not advised to bathe with, and in fact could cause more harm than good.

Or, as Dr. Jennifer Gunter put it:

I still don’t understand how this isn’t parody. I just can’t even. https://t.co/5p8fYzI5dw
— Jennifer Gunter (@DrJenGunter) April 23, 2020


https://www.huffpost.com/entry/cristina-cuomo-clorox-coronavirus_l_5ea1e30ec5b60f4ac13f4914?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ29vZ2xlLmNvLnVrLw&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAIbeXqkRpfKS4t7DKbQRrXuSoiTiRejGqzYbVjxTknkzzot-QU0FWQrDoAVjpKG1Z14IZnl0w6Zza97Q9hpnXJ9QkbXO2ktsDcEe5IMHW7gaCtzUkeCdvIsSeK1K8JZPfO3932fUi2K1jSLtrmHlBsWEhdt36rl6iB3QF4b7o1HQ

Or, one could ingest it as Trump recommended. That, and shoving a UV lamp up your ass.

:rofl2:
 
tumblr_m0fbtr3wPI1qccp2lo1_500.gif




Do Not Bathe In Clorox Like Cristina Cuomo Has Been Doing

In a post on her Goop-like wellness blog Purist, Cuomo shared a laundry list of holistic methods she is using to tackle the coronavirus, including a “body charger” borrowed from a friend that sends electrical frequencies through the body, a vitamin drip done by a doctor who makes house calls to the Hamptons and what appears to be billions of milligrams of vitamins.

Yet one method rang decidedly unnatural: bathing in Clorox.

“Both days, I added 1/2 cup of Clorox to my bathwater to combat the radiation and metals in my system and oxygenate it,” she wrote of her routine.

If you’re thinking, “Um, come again?” you’re not alone. Bleach doesn’t seem like something we should be bathing in, pandemic or otherwise ― right? Right??

She is, it appears, not the only one curious about or engaging in the practice.

The Clorox website is clear about where it stands on the matter: No, it is not recommended to bathe in bleach. It details a scenario in which bleach is added to drinking water as treatment ― but that’s 1/8 of a teaspoon ― and to be used only in an emergency. “Using a bleach and water solution for bathing is not approved by the EPA and should not be done,” it states.

A doctor of infectious diseases in Blue York state said he didn’t even really know what to say about what he called “not mainstream or evidence-based medicine,” but explained that while bleach is an effective tool for decontaminating surfaces like, say, a bathtub, it is not advised to bathe with, and in fact could cause more harm than good.

Or, as Dr. Jennifer Gunter put it:

I still don’t understand how this isn’t parody. I just can’t even. https://t.co/5p8fYzI5dw
— Jennifer Gunter (@DrJenGunter) April 23, 2020


https://www.huffpost.com/entry/cristina-cuomo-clorox-coronavirus_l_5ea1e30ec5b60f4ac13f4914?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ29vZ2xlLmNvLnVrLw&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAIbeXqkRpfKS4t7DKbQRrXuSoiTiRejGqzYbVjxTknkzzot-QU0FWQrDoAVjpKG1Z14IZnl0w6Zza97Q9hpnXJ9QkbXO2ktsDcEe5IMHW7gaCtzUkeCdvIsSeK1K8JZPfO3932fUi2K1jSLtrmHlBsWEhdt36rl6iB3QF4b7o1HQ

will you Mormons now make green jello with Clorox
 
All_Clx.gif



The wife of CNN host Fredo Cuomo is being criticized after revealing she poured half a cup of Clorox in her bath twice a week in a list of bizarre coronavirus treatments posted to her lifestyle blog.

Magazine editor Cristina Cuomo shared that the bleach is ‘technically salt’ and she used it to ‘combat the radiation and metals in my system’, in direct contrast to warnings given by Clorox that contact with skin should be avoided.

Cuomo, 50, claims the advice was provided by Dr. Linda Lancaster, who describes herself as an "energy medicine and homeopathic physician" and lists high-profile names such as Robert Redford among her clients.

Cristina, Fredo, 49, and their son Mario Cuomo, 14, all tested positive for coronavirus although she and her husband have since recovered.

Social media users quickly hit out at Cristina Cuomo for posting about her Clorox baths

‘At the direction of my doctor, Dr. Linda Lancaster, who reminded me that this is an oxygen-depleting virus, she suggested I take a bath and add a nominal amount of bleach. Yes, bleach,’ Cuomo wrote.

‘So, I add a small amount– ½ cup ONLY–of Clorox to a full bath of warm water–why? To combat the radiation and metals in my system and oxygenate it.’

She also shared a direct quote from Lancaster in which the natural medicine physician claims that bleach is essentially salt.

‘We want to neutralize heavy metals because they slow-up the electromagnetic frequency of our cells, which is our energy field, and we need a good flow of energy. Clorox is sodium chloride–which is technically salt. There is no danger in doing this. It is a simple naturopathic treatment that has been used for over 75 years to oxygenate the cells,’ Lancaster said.

‘Household bleach is not chlorine.’

Social media users immediately hit back at Cuomo’s recommendation, branding it ‘stupidity’ and highlighting that bleach is not ‘technically salt’.

‘My god, Fredo Cuomo’s wife, Cristina, may be one of the dumbest people alive,’ one wrote.

‘She BATHED IN CLOROX to treat Coronavirus. She calls Clorox, “sodium chloride” which is technically salt. In reality, Clorox is sodium hypochlorite, Note: she graduated from Cornell…’




https://www.soundhealthandlastingwealth.com/health-news/wife-of-cnn-host-chris-cuomo-is-mocked-for-saying-she-bathed-in-clorox-to-treat-coronavirus/
 
The wife of CNN host Fredo Cuomo is being criticized after revealing she poured half a cup of Clorox in her bath twice a week in a list of bizarre coronavirus treatments posted to her lifestyle blog.

Magazine editor Cristina Cuomo shared that the bleach is ‘technically salt’ and she used it to ‘combat the radiation and metals in my system’, in direct contrast to warnings given by Clorox that contact with skin should be avoided.

Cuomo, 50, claims the advice was provided by Dr. Linda Lancaster, who describes herself as an "energy medicine and homeopathic physician" and lists high-profile names such as Robert Redford among her clients.

Cristina, Fredo, 49, and their son Mario Cuomo, 14, all tested positive for coronavirus although she and her husband have since recovered.

Social media users quickly hit out at Cristina Cuomo for posting about her Clorox baths

‘At the direction of my doctor, Dr. Linda Lancaster, who reminded me that this is an oxygen-depleting virus, she suggested I take a bath and add a nominal amount of bleach. Yes, bleach,’ Cuomo wrote.

‘So, I add a small amount– ½ cup ONLY–of Clorox to a full bath of warm water–why? To combat the radiation and metals in my system and oxygenate it.’

She also shared a direct quote from Lancaster in which the natural medicine physician claims that bleach is essentially salt.

‘We want to neutralize heavy metals because they slow-up the electromagnetic frequency of our cells, which is our energy field, and we need a good flow of energy. Clorox is sodium chloride–which is technically salt. There is no danger in doing this. It is a simple naturopathic treatment that has been used for over 75 years to oxygenate the cells,’ Lancaster said.

‘Household bleach is not chlorine.’

Social media users immediately hit back at Cuomo’s recommendation, branding it ‘stupidity’ and highlighting that bleach is not ‘technically salt’.

‘My god, Fredo Cuomo’s wife, Cristina, may be one of the dumbest people alive,’ one wrote.

‘She BATHED IN CLOROX to treat Coronavirus. She calls Clorox, “sodium chloride” which is technically salt. In reality, Clorox is sodium hypochlorite, Note: she graduated from Cornell…’

As I just educated your comrade "stretch," Chris Cuomo's wife ain't President, nor did she say such on national TV, goes to show you how desperate the Trumpkins are for a deflection off of Trump's idiocy
 
Cuomos’ Coronavirus Health Blog Suggests Bathing In Clorox And Using A Body Charger

springcleaninggif.gif





On Wednesday, CNN anchor Fredo Cuomo’s wife Cristina published a wellness blog on Purist titled, “The Cuomos’ Corona Protocol, Week 3.”

The blog suggests that Clorox bleach baths and using a so-called “body charger” are helpful in combating the China-originated novel coronavirus, COVID-19.

Both Fredo and Cristina have said they tested positive for the virus.

“The point of sharing my story is to help people become aware of the various options that are available beyond the over-strained medical system and to give a voice to the scientific advances that could have real impact on our collective health,” Cristina wrote. “Sharing new knowledge is not elitist, it’s revolutionary.”

“I enlisted Dr. Linda Lancaster, who put us on a path of natural remedies to build our immune systems—and it’s working for us,” she wrote. “I am sharing this, but this isn’t a debate. If you think these are far-fetched treatments, think again.”

"At the direction of my doctor, Dr. Linda Lancaster, who reminded me that this is an oxygen-depleting virus, she suggested I take a bath and add a nominal amount of bleach. Why? To combat the radiation and metals in my system and oxygenate it. “We want to neutralize heavy metals because they slow up the electromagnetic frequency of our cells, which is our energy field, and we need a good flow of energy. Clorox is sodium chloride—which is technically salt. Clorox is made by introducing an electric current to water and sodium chloride (saline) creating sodium hypochlorite. There is no danger in doing this. It is a simple naturopathic treatment that has been used for over 75 years to oxygenate the cells,” says Dr. Lancaster. “Household bleach is not chlorine.” I found information on this in Dr. Lancaster’s Harmonic Healing book and the chapter on heavy metals."

“We are all exposed to radiation (phone/Wi-Fi) and that agitates our cells,” says Lancaster, who also recommended a sea salt (1 pound) and baking soda (1 full box) bath to help with this too".

Mrs. Fredo then described using a so-called “body charger” to send “electrical frequencies through my body to oxygenate my blood and stimulate the healthy production of blood cells to fortify my immune system”:

"I used a machine—a “Body Charger,” which energy specialist Randy Oppitz suggested. It sent electrical frequencies through my body to oxygenate my blood and stimulate the healthy production of blood cells to fortify my immune system. It also rebalanced my energy, which was gravely off from the stress of care-giving, catching the virus, figuring out what works for me, and the anxiety of my kids getting it. “The key to healing the human body is directly related to the body’s ability to allow energy to flow through it. I discovered in my 40-year career as a personal energy specialist that every person I ever worked with has blocked energies. The Body Charger is a device that transfers energy, breaks up, and pulls out the low frequency while replacing with a higher rate,” says Oppitz, who works with cancer patients and people suffering from chronic disease".












https://www.dailywire.com/news/the-cuomos-coronavirus-health-blog-suggests-bathing-in-clorox-bleach-and-using-a-body-charger
 
https://66.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m0fbtr3wPI1qccp2lo1_500.gif
Do Not Bathe In Clorox Like Cristina Cuomo Has Been Doing...

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/cristina-cuomo-clorox-coronavirus_l_5ea1e30ec5b60f4ac13f4914
Excellent retort to Trump's gaff with his "injection inside". He's receiving global ridicule for that comment even though he now claims it was "sarcasm".

As for Christina Cuomo, she's as flaky and dimwitted as Trump and Gwyneth Paltrow. Someone's flaky, dimwitted wife (or husband) isn't important, but I can see why someone would attack a person's spouse. It means they don't have anything more important to argue.
 
Cristina Cuomo says she treated her coronavirus with Clorox

caDX2FY.png




Experts are warning the public about alternative remedies Cristina Cuomo says she and her family used during their fight against the novel coronavirus.

Cuomo, the founder of the health and wellness platform PURIST, has shared health updates on her family's recovery on her blog, crediting a number of unconventional methods with their improvement.

"If you think these are far-fetched treatments think again," Cuomo writes. "I went through tons of antibiotics for Lyme Disease this past year, which did not help eradicate the Lyme. Only when I took a natural course did I get better. I’m applying that information to this virus because I believe in natural medicine."

Cuomo says she takes oxygenated herbs every day to strengthen her immune system, including Echinacea Osha and nontoxic quinine (aka, Peruvian bark). She also takes the decongestant Sinex, antivirals and numerous vitamins to fight sinus symptoms.

Cuomo says she enlisted a doctor to make a house call in a hazmat suit to administer a vitamin-packed drip, including folic acid, zinc and caffeine, to combat a sinus infection.

However, medical professionals disagreed with several of her tactics for managing COVID-19 symptoms, which range from pricey at-home vitamin drips to Clorox baths.

Here's what experts say about the methods:

Physician LaMar Hasbrouck, a former senior medical officer at the Centers for Disease Control, tells USA TODAY to caution against this practice saying that a high-concentrate drip runs the risk of "potential toxicities." He adds, "Too much of any good thing at a high enough concentration can be toxic. And you can potentially introduce infection if you’re not cleaning the site right."

To the dismay of medical professionals – Cuomo says she adds "½ cup ONLY of Clorox" to her bathwater to "combat the radiation and metals in my system and oxygenate it."

"We want to neutralize heavy metals because they slow-up the electromagnetic frequency of our cells, which is our energy field, and we need a good flow of energy," Cuomo explains.

She adds there is "no danger in doing this," comparing it to "a simple naturopathic treatment."

However, Dr. Hasbrouck says soaking in a Clorox bath can do harm on the body: “Where’s the harm going to come? Just the abrasiveness of the chemical on your skin."

He says the suggested remedy doesn’t make sense for several reasons, including the fact that the bleach doesn’t have clear path of getting through your skin and to the virus. And don't even think about drinking bleach – it's unsafe and "is not going to get to your respiratory system," says Hasbrouk.

Dr. Jose Luis Ocampo, a board-certified emergency medicine physician at Kaiser Permanente in Baldwin Park, California, also urged the public to use caution.

"As a physician, I would never recommend something that was not proven efficacious and safe for patients to use or do. I have never recommended Clorox bleach."

Cuomo also mentions use of a "body charger" machine that she says sends electrical frequencies to rebalance your energy. She adds, "The key to healing the human body is directly related to the body’s ability to allow energy to flow through it."

Cuomo also uses a portable pulsed electromagnetic field (PEMF) machine, saying it "increases the speed with which your lungs and whole body can recover."

Hasbrouck strongly urges people against taking "matters into their own hands."



https://coronaviruslink.com/cristina-cuomo-says-she-treated-her-coronavirus-with-clorox-baths-vitamin-drips-experts-react.html
 
No, he thinks Americans should inject disinfectants rather than bath in it, least bathing in it won't kill you, can't say the same for injecting it, and he's the President, well, least on paper

lib'ruls are stupid enough to drink fishbowl cleaner and bathe in bleach so it comes as no surprise they think Trump said to inject hand sanitizer disinfectant into their blood stream........
 
Back
Top