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Is That Plausible?

Ben Johnson, founder of Osmosis Skincare, claims that just a teaspoon of his drinkable sunscreen will offer three hours of protection from ultraviolet light damage to the skin. How? Johnson explains that secret is “harmonized water made by manipulating radio waves that naturally occur in water to give them UV-cancelling properties, then duplicating that process hundreds of thousands of times, and bottling that water up.”

The gold standard in science is the randomized, controlled, double-blind trial. If you want to know whether Garcinia cambogia causes weight loss, or whether glucosamine helps with arthritic pain, there is only one way to find out. You have an experimental group that is given the substance and a control group that is given a placebo, with every other variable being held constant. These are difficult, expensive studies to carry out because you need a large enough group of subjects for statistical weight, you have to ensure compliance and you have to monitor what is going on. Almost always some questions remain unanswered. Could results have been different with a different dose? Perhaps a longer experimental time is needed. Were all variables properly controlled for?

While randomized controlled trials are important, they are not always necessary. Science has accumulated a great deal of knowledge over the years making it possible to make evaluations based on scientific plausibility. Let’s take an extreme example. You see a picture on the web that purportedly shows a man floating over the country side being held aloft by a couple of dozen helium balloons. We do not need to design a trial to determine if this is possible. It is not. Why? Because of the law of buoyancy. A balloon filled with helium rises because the helium in it weighs less than the amount of air it displaces. Using this difference in weight, one can calculate the weight a balloon can lift. A liter of air weighs roughly 1 gram more than a liter of helium, so that’s what the balloon can lift. A 50 kilo man would need at least 3500 balloons to experience any lift at all. There is no need to carry out any experiment to know that the picture on the web is a fake.

Similarly no randomized trials are needed to determine that oxygenated water, despite its advertisers’ claims, cannot increase energy or improve physical stamina. The amount of oxygen dissolved in the water can be calculated and it is insignificant in comparison to what the body uses. Furthermore, we breathe through our lungs, not through our stomach, so that whatever oxygen is dissolved in the water is not going to make it into the blood to combine with hemoglobin. In addition, blood is normally saturated with oxygen anyway.

Neither do we have to carry out studies to determine if the newly approved artificial sweetener advantame should be required to carry a warning about a risk for people afflicted with phenylketonurea (PKU), a genetic inability to metabolize the amino acid phenylalanine. Advantame has a chemical similarity to aspartame, and like its cousin, can release phenylalanine. Why does it not need a warning? Because it is one hundred times sweeter than aspartame, so only one, one hundredth as much is needed to sweeten a beverage. This cannot release enough phenylalanine to cause a problem.

There is no need to mount experiments to determine whether tuning forks can restore the human body’s natural vibration of 60-65 Hz and thereby alleviate all sorts of health issues, as is claimed by the promoters of “Sound Therapy.” There is no such thing as the body having a natural vibrational frequency, and talk of tuning forks being able to restore al frequency that has gone out of tune due to illness is plain nonsense. Claims that tuning forks can address specific diseases like cancer or multiple sclerosis are just out of tune with what we know about how the body works. The idea that cancer can be cured with a tuning form is totally implausible and does not require an experiment to prove that it is not sound. The same goes for “drinkable sunscreen.”

Ben Johnson, founder of Osmosis Skincare, claims that just a teaspoon of his drinkable sunscreen will offer three hours of protection from ultraviolet light damage to the skin. How? Johnson explains that secret is “harmonized water made by manipulating radio waves that naturally occur in water to give them UV-cancelling properties, then duplicating that process hundreds of thousands of times, and bottling that water up.” Some electronic gizmo seems to be involved that according to a “propriety math formula” imprints frequencies on water molecules by forming a standing wave.”

The imprinted water then travels to the surface of the skin by some mysterious mechanism where it “vibrates on the skin” and blocks the UV rays.” Just in case further convincing is needed, we are told that “similar to how noise reduction headphones work, these waters help to cancel out and rebalance internal disharmonies by delivering medicinal radiofrequencies to your cells in the form of water.” This would be amusing nonsense if it did not deal with a serious issue. Skin cancer is no laughing matter.

Curiously Johnson has an MD although mercifully he does not practice medicine. He surrendered his medical license after admitting to “unprofessional conduct” in his laser hair removal and skin care practice. Basically the unprofessional conduct was incompetence. Now he is practicing his unprofessional conduct in a different area. Not only does he market drinkable sunscreen, he has harmonized waters that claim to treat fatigue, low libido, elevated testosterone levels and digestive problems. Others“activate hair” and cater to “mental well-being.” “Harmonized water” almost makes homeopathy sound plausible. Well, not really.


@JoeSchwarcz

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