Doctors in India are warning against the practice of using cow poop as COVID-19 cure because there is no scientific evidence for its effectiveness and that it risks spreading other diseases.
India has
continued to face the world’s most devastating wave of the coronavirus
pandemic, with 22.66 million cases and 246,116 deaths reported so far. Experts believe the actual numbers could be
five to 10 times higher, and citizens across the country are struggling to find
hospital beds, oxygen, or medicines, leaving many to die for lack of treatment.
In the state
of Gujarat in western India, some believers have been going to cow shelters
once a week to cover their bodies in cow poop and urine in the hope it will
boost their immunity against, or help them recover from coronavirus.
"We see
... even doctors come here. Their belief is that this therapy improves their
immunity and they can go and tend to patients with no fear," said Gautam
Manilal Borisa, an associate manager at a pharmaceuticals company, who said the
practice helped him recover from COVID-19 last year.
Reuter
reports that participants wait for the dung and urine mixture on their bodies
to dry, they hug or honour the cows at the shelter, and practice yoga to boost
energy levels. The packs are then washed off with milk or buttermilk.
Doctors and
scientists in India and across the world have repeatedly warned against bizarre
practice, saying they can lead to a false sense of security and complicate
health problems.
"There
is no concrete scientific evidence that cow dung or urine work to boost
immunity against COVID-19, it is based entirely on belief," said Dr. JA
Jayalal, national president at the Indian Medical Association.
"There
are also health risks involved in smearing or consuming these products - other
diseases can spread from the animal to humans."
There are
also concerns the practice could contribute to the spread of coronavirus as it
involved people gathering in groups.
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