
The bottle of Children’s Tylenol Cherry carries, on the same panel as the dosing chart, a warning the manufacturer is required to print: severe liver damage may occur if a child takes more than five doses in twenty-four hours. The recommended maximum is five doses, and the dose at which the manufacturer concedes severe liver damage occurs is six. The gap between the maximum and the harm, by the label’s own admission, is a single additional dose.
That bottle is in roughly every household with a child. It has been there for seventy years. The space between the maximum dose and the documented harm is printed where any parent could read it and almost no parent does.
The audit is built on a single observation, demonstrated sixteen times: the establishment has already produced most of the case against the products it continues to sell. The strongest evidence for almost every drug comes from the manufacturer’s own label, the FDA’s own documents, the courts’ own findings, and the medical establishment’s own peer-reviewed research. The book assembles it in one place, drug by drug, in a form a household can use.
New Book by Unbekoming: What is in the bottle, what it does, and what to do instead — sixteen drugs, audited from the establishment’s own record
LINK TO DETAILS:https://open.substack.com/pub/unbekoming/p/the-family-medicine-cabinet-audit?r=1dbkwf&utm_medium=ios
