Here’s what those two viral headlines are really about:
🧴 1. “Rub VICKS VapoRub on your feet and toes and discover…”
This refers to a common home remedy involving Vicks VapoRub.
🧠 What people claim:
- It can stop coughs
- Help you sleep
- “Pull out toxins” from the body
- Cure cold symptoms faster
🔬 What science says:
- Vicks contains menthol, camphor, eucalyptus oil
- These can temporarily relieve cough sensation when inhaled
- Rubbing it on feet has no proven medical effect on lungs or colds
👉 Feet application is folk remedy, not medical treatment
⚠️ Bottom line:
It may help you feel better (placebo + smell), but it does NOT treat infection or “clean toxins.”
💊 2. “Pharmacist issues warning to anyone who takes vitamins”
This type of headline usually refers to real concerns about dietary supplements.
🧠 What pharmacists actually warn about:
💊 1. Overdosing
Too much of certain vitamins can be harmful:
- Vitamin A → liver damage
- Vitamin D → high calcium levels
- Vitamin B6 → nerve damage risk
(Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA))
💊 2. Drug interactions
Supplements can interfere with medicines:
- Magnesium / iron / calcium → reduce antibiotic absorption
- Vitamin K → affects blood thinners
- Multivitamins → affect thyroid drugs
(EatingWell)
💊 3. “More is not better” myth
- Many vitamins are already enough in diet
- Extra pills don’t always improve health
- Some can build up in the body or cause toxicity
(Tyla)
🧠 Simple truth
Vitamins are helpful when needed, but unnecessary high-dose use or mixing with medications can sometimes cause harm.
💡 Final summary
- 🧴 Vicks on feet = comfort remedy, not a medical cure
- 💊 Vitamin warnings = real concern about overdose + drug interactions, not “vitamins are dangerous for everyone”
If you want, I can break down:
- which vitamins are actually safe daily
- or which supplements seniors should avoid 👍