U.S. Federal Government Attempts To Ban Nasal Spray That Company Claims Is Scientifically Proven To Be Effective Against COVID-19

Nasal sprays can help you treat and prevent COVID-19
This particular nasal spray contains a few simple ingredients and causes no side effects.
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The product is commercially available and you don’t have to pay a lot of money to get it. Moreover, you don’t need a prescription.
Guess what… The US government wants to ban the nasal spray.
Have you ever used Xlear?
It’s a natural saline spray used to relieve congestion. It removes bacteria and other pollutants from nasal tissues.
The formula uses xylitol to clean tissues and moisturize the nasal passages.
Xlear contains saline solution, grapefruit seed extract, and xylitol.
The Utah-based company says the nasal spray can be used in the treatment of coronavirus.
Several studies support this claim. The federal government decided to file a lawsuit and ban the company from advertising the spray as treatment against COVID-19.
The leading US manufacturer of Xylitol-based products says the US federal government is deliberately trying to conceal a nasal spray it developed that it says has been scientifically proven to be effective in treating and preventing #COVID19. https://t.co/NLLIQFKSUB
— The Epoch Times (@EpochTimes) November 11, 2021
Nasal spray company said its product prevents, treats COVID. Now regulators are suing#Xlear https://t.co/EsncBaoq4j
— ᚷᚱᛁᛗᚾᛁᚱ ʕ´•ᴥ•`ʔ #DestroyTheAadhaar (@CryoPerSea) November 12, 2021
COVID-19 is the disease caused by SARS-CoV-2, commonly known as the novel coronavirus.https://t.co/NIyMuYkTHb
— Collective Spark (@CollectiveSprk) November 12, 2021
Of course they want to block it how could someone even suggest a therapeutic approach to C-19? Vaccine or bust…
Feds Seek to Block Promotion of a Nasal Spray Against COVID-19 https://t.co/tdcfYHBFfk— Lem Taylor (@LemTaylor_PhD) November 12, 2021
From The Epoch Times via Zero Hedge:
The U.S. Department of Justice filed a lawsuit in federal court against Utah-based company Xlear on Oct. 28, saying it has deceptively advertised its nasal spray as a treatment and preventative of COVID-19.
The lawsuit asks a federal court to permanently ban the company from promoting the nasal spray as a treatment for COVID-19 and also asks that monetary penalties be levied against it.
COVID-19 is the disease caused by SARS-CoV-2, commonly known as the novel coronavirus.
The DOJ filed the complaint on behalf of the Federal Trade Commission, which alleges the company has violated the Federal Trade Commission Act and the Consumer Protection Act by making false claims about the benefits.
“Companies can’t make unsupported health claims, no matter what form a product takes, or what it supposedly prevents or treats,” said Samuel Levine, director of the trade commission’s Bureau of Consumer Protection, said in a press release on the lawsuit.
“That’s the lesson of this case and many others like it, and it’s why people should continue to rely on medical professionals over ads.”
Xlear’s attorney Robert Housman said the commission lies about the whole situation.
From The Epoch Times via Zero Hedge:
Housman pointed out that the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)—along with the National Institutes of Health (NIH), an arm of the Department of Health and Human Services—funded clinical studies of the use of nasal sprays like Xlear’s and published findings last year that found they were an effective treatment and method of prevention for COVID-19.
“When Xlear tells people about scientific studies, even ones republished by the NIH, we are somehow misleading people and making false claims. It’s nonsensical,” Housman told The Epoch Times.
“Rather than embrace nasal interventions, the government is trying to eliminate their use because they don’t fit the government’s highly flawed, vaccine-only agenda.”
One study was backed by the NIH. The random clinical trial was conducted at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Tennessee.
Here are the findings of the September 2020 study:
Nasal saline irrigation is a commonly accepted and inexpensive therapy with proven efficacy as a treatment for viral upper respiratory infections and has been proposed as a potentially beneficial treatment for COVID-19.9 Here, we present initial findings from the first RCT evaluating nasal irrigations in non-hospitalized patients with COVID-19. The effect of nasal irrigation on symptom resolution was substantial, with nasal congestion and headache resolving a median of 7 to 9 days earlier in the intervention groups. Our analysis suggests that nasal irrigations may shorten symptom duration and may have potential as a widely available and inexpensive intervention to reduce disease burden among those affected. The additive effects of surfactant remain unclear, because the impact of HTS and HTSS on symptom resolution was fairly equivalent, and it has been reported that surfactant nasal irrigations are associated with some tolerability issues in a subset of patients.10 However, the addition of surfactant may have beneficial effects on viral shedding and/or maturation given their reported ability to rapidly induce membrane dissolution and lysis of many viruses and other microorganisms.
Another study was conducted in November. It was conducted at Larkin Community Hospital in Florida.
There’s an ongoing trial in Augusta, Georgia.
Conclusion SARS-CoV-2+ participants initiating nasal irrigation were over 8 times less likely to be hospitalized than the national rate.
The US Department of Justice ignores the findings.
During the early stages of COVID-19, could a commercially available nasal spray containing xylitol and grapefruit seed extract (GSE), namely Xlear Nasal Spray be beneficial? https://t.co/a8QIg3wxyF
— Linda Mulvey (@LindaMulvey4) November 12, 2021
XLEAR NASAL SPRAY COVID-19: STUDY CONCLUDES XLEAR KILLS AND/OR DEACTIVATES SARS-COV-2; EFFICACY AGAINST NEW VARIANTShttps://t.co/swpgq1eNsk
— TΞJAS (@tejasreports) November 11, 2021
From Collective Spark:
The Justice Department didn’t specifically cite the Larkin, Vanderbilt, or Augusta trials in its lawsuit.
It instead cited the results of lab studies conducted earlier at the University of North Carolina–Chapel Hill and the University of Tennessee involving in vitro and animal testing, neither of which the DOJ and FTC argue is a viable way to test nasal spray for live, human COVID-19 patients.
The lawsuit additionally pointed out that the University of Tennessee study is based on a nasal spray containing iota-carrageenan, which the Xlear spray does not contain and, therefore, cannot be used as scientific evidence to support Xlear’s claims.
The lawsuit also stated that researchers at Chapel Hill admitted that without further research it couldn’t conclusively determine that “administering treatment through the nose is the best way to treat COVID-19.”
Housman said the trade commission cherry-picked findings within the lab studies to make them fit its agenda.
The federal government has warned companies against promoting nasal sprays for the treatment and prevention of COVID-19.
BlueWillow Biologics, a Michigan biopharmaceutical company that manufactures a nasal antiseptic, and the Miami-based company Halodine, which created a proprietary iodine-based nasal antiseptic swab, both received warning letters earlier this year from the FDA to discontinue their promotion of their nasal products as a safe and effective treatment for COVID-19.
A special disclaimer:
Before you use Xlear, consult your doctor. We are not doctors, we are just sharing the results of studies.
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Source: WeLoveTrump