NBC News: “In a TikTok video that has garnered hundreds of thousands of views, Dr. Carrie Madej outlined the ingredients for a bath she said will ‘detox the vaxx’ for people who have given into Covid-19 vaccine mandates. The ingredients in the bath are mostly not harmful, although the supposed benefits attached to them are entirely fictional. Baking soda and epsom salts, she falsely claims, will provide a ‘radiation detox’ to remove radiation Madej falsely believes is activated by the vaccine. Bentonite clay will add a ‘major pull of poison,’ she says, based on a mistaken idea in anti-vaccine communities that toxins can be removed from the body with certain therapies.”
“Then, recommends adding in one cup of borax, a cleaning agent that’s been banned as a food additive by the FDA, to ‘take nanotechnologies out of you.’ In reality, in addition to being potentially harmful as a skin and eye irritant, a borax ‘detox bath’ will not remove the effects of the Covid vaccine from your body. The video is one of several methods anti-vaccine influencers and communities on social media have in recent weeks suggested to their many followers who have capitulated and received the Covid shot. Anti-vaccine message boards are now littered with users caving to societal pressure or work mandates and receiving a coronavirus vaccination. ‘Once you’re injected, the lifesaving vaccination process has already begun. You can’t unring a bell. It’s just not physically possible,’ said Angela Rasmussen, a virologist and adjunct professor at the University of Saskatchewan in Canada. Detox remedies and regimens have been staples of the anti-vaccine movement for years. Long before Covid, anti-vaccine influencers and alternative health entrepreneurs promoted unproven and sometimes dangerous treatments they claimed would rid children of the alleged toxins that lingered after routine childhood immunizations.”