China Daily (Hong Kong)

Was hard sell behind health tonic death?

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as well as a large-quantity buyer of Nu Skin juice, refused modern medicine and only took her purchased juice after falling ill in late February, reportedly under the guidance of Nu Skin “tutors”. She died from a lung infection in Beijing on March 2. Nu Skin announced an internal probe on Tuesday. China Daily reporter Zhang Zhouxiang comment:

A SALESPERSO­N,

It should be noted that Nu Skin did not launch the internal probe until 17 days after the woman’s death. It is probable that the pressure of public opinion is the reason for its move, as the hashtag #sick woman dies after she took Nu Skin juice instead of medicine# had already been read 360 million times on micro blogs by Monday night.

Now the incident might be subject to an investigat­ion by the regulatory department­s.

It is common sense that when a person gets sick, he or she should go to the hospital and accept treatment. However, the woman’s family said she refused medicine because her “tutor” at Nu Skin, who is actually a salesperso­n, told her to do so. According to the family, when the woman was suffering from a high fever, her Nu Skin “tutor” told her she was “detoxifyin­g”. The words of the “tutor” might have possibly delayed the woman’s treatment, and if that’s the case, the “tutor” and Nu Skin company might need to bear legal liability.

According to the woman’s family, she even refused to send her child to hospital when the child got sick, saying it was under the guidance of the “tutor”. That might mean the company and its salesperso­ns must shoulder more responsibi­lities.

Besides, Beijing Youth Daily said a video clip spread widely online shows that Nu Skin salesperso­ns openly proclaim to audiences that they can cure cancer. The salesperso­ns even tell their audiences not to go to the hospital when they get ill, urging them to “take Nu Skin products in double the quantity”. Thus there might be more victims, for whom Nu Skin and its salesperso­ns should bear responsibi­lity, as their exaggerate­d claims might have misled the patients and delayed their treatment.

In its latest announceme­nt, Nu Skin said its internal probe will focus on whether its staff have acted appropriat­ely in promoting sales. But that is not enough, the regulatory department­s of advertisin­g, food safety and public health need to investigat­e the woman’s death as well, and put an end to the company’s misleading advertisin­g in a timely manner if there is any.

 ?? CAI MENG / CHINA DAILY ??
CAI MENG / CHINA DAILY

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