Episode 85

Radium to Cleanses: Why We Still Fall for Bad Science

Published on: 17th July, 2025

A Shocking Health Trend from the Past

Today, you might see ads for detox teas, liver cleanses, and even hydrogen water. These products promise energy, better health, and a longer life.

But strange health trends are nothing new.

In the 1920s and 1930s, people paid good money to drink radioactive water. They believed it gave them energy, cured pain, and even helped them live longer. One brand, called Radithor, was sold as “perpetual sunshine in a bottle.”

Yes—people drank water mixed with radium, the same element now used in cancer treatments and nuclear reactors.

Why Did People Think It Worked?

At first, radium looked like a miracle. It glowed in the dark, and doctors were just beginning to understand radiation. Companies saw a chance to make money. So they started selling radium in toothpaste, face cream, chocolate, and, yes, bottled water.

One famous product, Radithor, was sold as a cure for everything from tiredness to “low manhood energy.”

People believed it worked. Why? Because it came from science. It looked exciting. And it was easy to believe a glowing bottle held glowing health.

Even doctors promoted it, just like some do with today’s wellness fads.

Read more on Radithor from the Oak Ridge Associated Universities


Meet the Tragic Case of Eben Byers

One man named Eben Byers became the face of this trend. He was rich, well-known, and loved Radithor. He drank it every day—three bottles a day for years.

For years, he said he felt great. But soon, the side effects started.

  • His teeth fell out.
  • Then his jaw crumbled.
  • Finally, bones weakened and broke.

Eventually, his body became so radioactive that they had to bury him in a lead coffin. It took years for this to take effect. But during the years he was drinking his deadly potion, he claimed improved health and vitality.

This helped end Radithor, but the public didn’t learn the bigger lesson.


Fast Forward to Today

Even though we know better, we still fall for bad science with a shiny label.

Let’s look at a few modern examples:

  • Gary Brekka sells hydrogen water as a health hack, even though there’s little proof it helps anyone.
  • Döse Liver Cleanse is a product that doesn’t actually cleanse your liver.
  • And of course, Goop keeps offering “natural” cures like jade eggs and bee-sting facials, with no solid research to back them up.

These trends all follow the Radithor formula:

  1. Make a wild claim
  2. Add buzzwords like “cleanse,” “cellular,” or “bioavailable”
  3. Skip the actual science
  4. Sell it fast before the truth catches up

What’s the Real Risk?

Most modern products won’t melt your jaw. But they can waste your money, give false hope, or delay real care.

Worse, they can make people distrust doctors and trust influencers instead.

Just like Radithor, these products often look scientific, but they skip important steps—like peer review, clinical trials, and safety data.

If you need a liver cleanse, your body already has one.
It’s called your liver. And it works 24/7—no powdered beetroot or milk thistle needed.

What Should You Do Instead?

Instead of chasing magic drinks or secret pills:

  • Eat whole foods
  • Move your body regularly
  • Sleep well
  • See real medical professionals
  • Ask for evidence—not just stories

If something sounds too good to be true, it probably is. Especially if it comes from someone selling supplements, not science.


Final Thought

We like to believe we’re smarter than the past. But we still fall for the same trick, just with different packaging.

So next time you see a glowing promise in a bottle, ask yourself:

Is this progress… or just Radithor with better lighting?
Transcript
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>> Dr. Terry Simpson: There is a long unfortunate history of

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people drinking things they absolutely shouldn't.

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From bleach to celery juice, from

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detox teas to silver colloids.

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It all started maybe a hundred years ago

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when the hottest wellness trend was

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radioactive water. Yep,

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people paid good money to drink radium

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and it was sold as a cure for fatigue,

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sexual dysfunction, aging, you name it.

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I'm Dr. Terri Simpson, your chief medical

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explanationist and this is Fork you

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fork University, where we make sense of the madness,

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bust myths wide open and shine a

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clinical spotlight on medical history's biggest

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mistakes. Today we're talking about glowing

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urine, crumbling jaws and the

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radioactive energy drink that almost got away with

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it.

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In the early 1900s, Murray and Pierre Curie

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discovered radium. At first it was hailed

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as a scientific miracle. It could shrink tumors,

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it could power machines, it glowed in the dark.

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What could go wrong? Naturally, the public

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didn't wait for peer reviewed studies. Radium

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quickly became the next big health fading.

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Companies bottled radium infused water

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claiming it could boost energy, stimulate

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digestion, cure arthritis and even

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enhance, well, let's say vitality in

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the bedroom. One of the most famous products was

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Radiodhor. It came in a sleek glass

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vial and promised perpetual

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sunshine. Each dose contained

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radium 226 and radium 228

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in actual drinkable doses.

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This wasn't microdosing. This was a one

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way ticket to your local radiation ward

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and people drank it by the gallon.

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Let's talk about Eben Byers. Wealthy

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Ivy league athlete,

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industrialist, socialite. After

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an arm injury, his doctor prescribed Radiathor to help

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with his general weakness. He loved it.

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He claimed it gave him energy, boosted his

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performance and improved his overall health.

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So he started taking three bottles a day

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for years. But then something

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started to happen. His teeth began to fall

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out, his jaw deteriorated,

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his bones turned brittle and started breaking

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and his skull developed holes.

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When the Federal Trade Commission finally got involved, he was

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literally falling apart. A reporter from

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the Wall Street Journal visited him and said the

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radium water worked fine until his jaw

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came off. By the time of his

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death in 1932, his body was

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so radioactive he had to be buried in a lead

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lined coffin. So what does that have

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to do with today? Well, let's look at the formula.

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Take a new scientific discovery,

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mix in vague health promises, add a

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dash of trust in personal testimonials,

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skip all the clinical testing, package it with

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buzzwords and celebrity hype. Sound

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familiar? Today we see the same

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cycle play out. Colloidal silver touted as a

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cure all even Though it turns people blue.

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Alkaline water, which ignores

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basic human physiology. Detox

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teas, which actually have no detoxifying

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ingredients. AI generated

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liver scams that paste my face on bottles and

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falsely claim that I endorse them. Yes, someone

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used my photo to market a fake liver detox

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supplement. By the way, they're all fake and claimed

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I supported it. I didn't. And it doesn't

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actually work because liver cleanses don't

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work. Your liver cleanses all by

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itself. So Radiothor may be

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gone and obvious that it was a problem,

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but the con and the basis of the con

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lives on. Just now it glows with

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artificial intelligence. Instead of radium, we have

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people calling themselves like the human biologist

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Dr. Gary Breca, who isn't a doctor

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who never graduated anything more than a bachelor's in

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biology degree and claims he can

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predict your actual date of death.

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So how did Radiothor get pulled off the market?

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Only after Eben buyers died and made headlines did the

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US government step in. The Federal Trade

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Commission began investigating the so called radioactive

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tonics and eventually new regulations from the

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FDA started banning untested radioactive

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health products. From that point on,

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radiation exposure limits became part of public

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health policy. And Radiothorpe, it became

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a cautionary tale in medical schools and law

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books. The irony? Radium does

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have real medical uses, like in cancer

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treatment, but it's carefully dosed,

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precisely targeted and medically

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supervised. Radium wasn't the

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villain. The villain was selling science without

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evidence and letting the public figure out the side

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effects one jaw at a time.

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We're still doing this. We're still buying

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natural products with no testing.

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We're still trusting influencers over

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physicians. We're still skipping the science

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for the story. So the next time someone

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says this tonic gave me energy, ask

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was it the product or was it Radiothor

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all over again?

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This episode was researched and written by me, Dr. Terry

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Simpson. You can find the blog posts and

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references@yourdoctorsorders.com and

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4Q com and while I am a doubly

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board certified physician, I am not your

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physician. If you're tempted by a supplement,

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a tonic or an AI generated detox ad using

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my face, talk to a real doctor and

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a registered dietitian. Not your chiropractor,

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not a celebrity with a skincare line, and

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definitely not a bottle that cool glows in the dark.

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The episode was produced, distributed and all things

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audio by Simpler media and the pod got

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himself my good friend Mr. Evo

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Terra have a bright good

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but hopefully not radioactive week.

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Hey Evo. If a TikTok guru told you to drink

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radioactive water for gut health, Would you wash it down with

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a detox tea or just sign up for the next

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goop cleanse?

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>> Speaker B: Yeah, I'm gonna go none of the above. Uh, on that one?

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I think so. Oh, also, very fun and

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entertaining episode. Good.

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About the Podcast

Fork U with Dr. Terry Simpson
Learn more about what you put in your mouth.
Fork U(niversity)
Not everything you put in your mouth is good for you.

There’s a lot of medical information thrown around out there. How are you to know what information you can trust, and what’s just plain old quackery? You can’t rely on your own “google fu”. You can’t count on quality medical advice from Facebook. You need a doctor in your corner.

On each episode of Your Doctor’s Orders, Dr. Terry Simpson will cut through the clutter and noise that always seems to follow the latest medical news. He has the unique perspective of a surgeon who has spent years doing molecular virology research and as a skeptic with academic credentials. He’ll help you develop the critical thinking skills so you can recognize evidence-based medicine, busting myths along the way.

The most common medical myths are often disguised as seemingly harmless “food as medicine”. By offering their own brand of medicine via foods, These hucksters are trying to practice medicine without a license. And though they’ll claim “nutrition is not taught in medical schools”, it turns out that’s a myth too. In fact, there’s an entire medical subspecialty called Culinary Medicine, and Dr. Simpson is certified as a Culinary Medicine Specialist.

Where today's nutritional advice is the realm of hucksters, Dr. Simpson is taking it back to the realm of science.

About your host

Profile picture for Terry Simpson

Terry Simpson

Dr. Terry Simpson received his undergraduate, graduate, and medical degrees from the University of Chicago where he spent several years in the Kovler Viral Oncology laboratories doing genetic engineering. Until he found he liked people more than petri dishes. Dr. Simpson, a weight loss surgeon is an advocate of culinary medicine, he believes teaching people to improve their health through their food and in their kitchen. On the other side of the world, he has been a leading advocate of changing health care to make it more "relationship based," and his efforts awarded his team the Malcolm Baldrige award for healthcare in 2018 and 2011 for the NUKA system of care in Alaska and in 2013 Dr Simpson won the National Indian Health Board Area Impact Award. A frequent contributor to media outlets discussing health related topics and advances in medicine, he is also a proud dad, husband, author, cook, and surgeon “in that order.”