Herald on Sunday

Miracle water it is not

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Few subjects are sadder than cancer sufferers succumbing to quackery. The supposed miracle water being sold to cancer patients by a Taranaki company is worse than a false cure.

It could be harmful, in the judgment of a medical expert the Herald on

Sunday has consulted. Dr Nick Kim, from Massey University’s school of public health, has found the water to be laced with chlorine such as you get in household bleach, and salt.

Far more salt than is good for the body if the recommende­d dose of the “cure” is taken.

After an eight-week course (costing $1600) patients would have ingested 500g of salt, which would be damaging to kidneys, heart and blood pressure.

It fails the national standard for safe drinking water.

Te Kiri Gold’s inventor, Taranaki farmer Vernon Coxhead, tells cancer sufferers it is a “game changer”. Coxhead’s intentions are good. Interviewe­d for our report today, he says the potion he calls Te Kiri Gold grew out of experiment­s on his farm. He genuinely believes the chlorine and salt change the molecular structure of the body’s immune system, enabling it to reach cancers.

Dr Kim agrees hypochlori­te could kill cancer cells but indiscrimi­nately, killing healthy tissue too.

The combinatio­n of the good intentions of a true believer and the vulnerabil­ity of terminal cancer patients is a tragic one.

Kim calls for a government agency to police such products and he is right.

For the patients, it will seem there is nothing to lose. Whatever harm the concoction might do to good organs will seem worth it if it kills the cancer.

So if patients want to try everything, why not?

Because desperate, dying people are easy prey for vultures who might not have the pure motives of Coxhead. Snake oil salesmen are never far away from a lucrative market.

Informatio­n is always preferable to prohibitio­n and we hope our investigat­ion of Coxhead’s product will deter cancer sufferers from trying it and give them second thoughts if they are taking it.

Medical science is making good strides in immunother­apies. They are probably a better bet than the experiment­s of an enthusiast­ic amateur.

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