spreading, and actually killing it. The OnGuard does not kill the
virus. That is the simple reason why we are not to say it kills the
virus.
I'm not being difficult.. but we do need to be careful that we don't
say things that are factually incorrect. Even though it near enough
amounts to the same thing, we cannot say the OnGuard "kills" the
virus. My wife has a Masters Degree in Biotechnology, and this is how
she explained it to me.
On Feb 2, 7:46 pm, Jan Meredith <janessenti...@peak.org> wrote:
> According to the FDA, we are not allowed to say On Guard (or any other
> oil) kills or gets rid of infections of any type. We can use the words
> inhibits, discourages, reduces... and we can say they support the body
> to overcome, deal with, heal from... and we can say research shows
> that bacteria, viruses, molds, and parasites can't live in the
> presence of X oils.
>
> That's why we can say On Guard actually killed MRSA in the lab
> setting.
> Jan in Oregon
>
> On Feb 1, 5:41 pm, Valerie Hampton <vale...@donhamptonrealtor.com>
> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Ok, maybe I'm nuts. Couple of questions: I know this has been
> > discussed on here before. Is it true that On Guard kills MRSA? I
> > thought the answer to that is yes but I was just reading the brochure
> > we were given at convention & it shows positive results but I'm not
> > sure it says it does. Am I missing something? I've always thought
> > that the following link is the Pub Med article about MRSA & On Guard.
> > But I don't see MRSA in this. I see it talks about MDCK cells.
> > Anyway, if someone could straighten me out, I'd love that. Thank you!
>
> >http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21078173
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