Quackery in medicine is as old as medicine. In times of crisis desperate patients believe in extraordinary claims. In the annals of pain killer quack medicine, elixirs, nostrums and liniments hold a special position. The College of Dentistry at NYU received a collection of 234 bottles of quack medicine dating from approximately 1850 through 1940.
In this paper, the THIRD in a series of articles featuring “Elixirs of the Past”, we focus on five particularly notable samples claiming to have “electric” properties: Electric Brand Oil Compound, Hunt’s Lightening Oil, Electric Indian Liniment, Regent’s Electric Liniment and Haven’s Electro- magnetic Liniment. Needless to say, none of these contained electricity or even electrolytes for that matter. In 1906, Congress enacted The Pure Food and Drug Act to prohibit exaggerated or unsubstantiated claims in the marketing and labeling of household products and to control the use of potentially harmful ingredients. The modern-day use of internet advertisements to make unsupported claims is in some ways even more brazen than the advertisements from a century ago.
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