bobby said.....
http://www.ozpolitic.com/forum/YaBB.pl?num=1742622699/4#4 Quote:
1 hour after a couple of Panadols my temp returns to normal
and I don't feel too bad.
Not clever bobby.
Taking paracetamol.
Panadol is a paracetamol.
Wow ! ......who knew ?
The BBC knew, back in 2011Did the Australian government tell us ?
Did the government fund an information SAFETY campaign,
to warn Australians of the danger of
'taking slightly too much' paracetamol ?
No !
In 2020
the government banned access to
a proven safe to use anti-parasitic drug,
which has had 3.7 billion doses administered [to humans] in forty years [in many 3rd world nations].
But the government are happy, to let us buy paracetamol brands, off supermarket shelves, anywhere in Australia.
Q.
What's the hoo-ha with paracetamol ?
Read on.....Google.....
Researchers in the UK have found that
'taking slightly too much' of the common analgesic paracetamol over an extended period can cause acute liver failure.
And that paracetamol-induced liver injury was a leading cause of requirement for liver transplants, in the UK.
Quote:
ONLINE ARTICLES.....
#01
Paracetamol warning: 'Slightly too much can cause overdose'
23 November 2011
By Michelle Roberts
Health reporter, BBC News
https://www.bbc.com/news/health-15837468
#02
'A few extra' paracetamol kills a young mum after op
15 December 2011
https://www.bbc.com/news/newsbeat-16198157
#03
Paracetamol overdose is one of the leading causes of acute liver failure
Posted on: 1st February 2017
https://britishlivertrust.org.uk/researchers-shed-new-light-paracetamol-causes-l
iver-damage/
#04
Posted on: 2015 May 27.
Liver transplant associated with paracetamol overdults from the seven-country SALT study
Abstract
Aims: Acute drug overdose, especially with paracetamol, may cause acute liver failure leading to registration for transplantation (ALFT). Population statistics and between-country differences for ALFT related to overdose have been poorly described. The aim of the present study was to evaluate overdose ALFT in the multi-country Study of Acute Liver Transplantation (SALT).
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26017643/