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The Worst Medical & Health Advice Given by Celebrities

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The Worst Medical & Health Advice Given by Celebrities
Remember when Tom Cruise went on to The Today Show to promote a movie, but instead, he ended up dismissing postpartum depression, medication, and psychiatry? Why wouldn't he discuss mental health on national television? Tom Cruise is one of the leading medical experts of our time, correct? Wrong.   

Celebrities talk a lot and they get asked all kinds of questions a celebrity is in no position to answer. So is it any wonder that sometimes an actor, actress, musician, supermodel, or CEO shares medical diagnoses and beliefs even though they have no credentials whatsoever?

This list has some of the worst advice or practices celebrities have ever publicly shared about health. Whether it's a detoxifying beauty treatment based on leeching, a belief that sunscreen is poison, or a shady weight loss pill endorsement, all of these medical and health beliefs shared by famous people on this list are far-fetched, to say the least. They're unfounded, unstudied, and sometimes blatantly wrong.

But it's up to to decide just which celebrity medical advice is the least helpful and least scientific. Vote up the worst health and medical advice from celebrities. That's the only way we'll settle once and for all just which celebrity is least qualified to be a doctor.

Vote away and remember, the next time you start listening to Dr. Paltrow when it comes to skin cancer or take Mark Cuban, MD's advice on blood tests, you might want to go see your actual doctor instead.

http://www.ranker.com/list/the-worst-medical-and-health-advice-given-by-celebrities/matthewcoleweiss,

Tom Cruise Goes Anti-Psychiatry and Anti-Glibness
In 2005, Cruise took a lot of flak for the Today Show appearance in which he called Matt Lauer "glib" for questioning his anti-psychiatry convictions. As a Scientologist, Cruise does not believe in antidepressant drugs or the benefits of psychiatry. In dismissing the use of drugs to treat postpartum depression, Cruise claimed to know the history of psychiatry, but he is not, in fact, a medical professional, and the benefits of the psychiatry and psychiatric drugs in treating a wide spectrum of mental illnesses are well-documented.   

Source: Today

Demi Moore's Horrifying Medieval Beauty Tip
Demi Moore has professed to letting leeches suck her blood as part of a beauty treatment. Speaking with David Letterman on The Late Show, she said, "These aren't just swamp leeches though - we are talking about highly trained medical leeches." Though leeches can be used to coagulate blood during surgeries, there's no proof that they can help "detoxify" blood. On top of that, there are some risks of using leeches, including bleeding, allergic reactions, foreign body reactions, ulceration, and infection. Plus, they're leeches.

Source: Today
Jenny McCarthy's Anti-Vaccine Activism
Jenny McCarthy has long been a leading voice in the campaign against vaccines, saying that the measles, mumps, rubella vaccine led to her son's autism. She has also claimed to have "repaired" his autism through vitamins. There's no scientific basis to these claims, and parents opting against vaccinations for their children lower herd immunity, which is dangerous to everyone's health, especially the young and elderly. 

Source: The Atlantic, Frontline

Mark Cuban and the Plethora of Blood Tests
Shark Tank star and entrepreneur Mark Cuban, who has invested in four health care companies, tweeted (in tweets subsequently deleted) that people should get their blood tested four times a year if they can. Health experts pointed out the flaws in Cuban's quarterly testing idea, saying that the more blood tests you receive, the greater the possibility of false reports, misdiagnosis, and false positives, not to mention the fact that many people simply can't afford it.   

Source: Forbes
Beyonce and Jay-Z Put Their Stamp on "Veganuary" Cleanses
Many celebrities advocate using cleanses to rid yourself of toxins and fats. Beyonce and Jay-Z, for example, went on a vegan cleanse and avoided all animal products for a month. But doctors actually advise against the temporary lifestyle change, saying that it is simply advocating the detox myth and will not help your body if you only do it temporarily.

Source: National Post
Snooki Rubs Kitty Litter On Her Face
Apparently Snooki from Jersey Shore uses kitty litter as an exfoliant. On her skin. Not only did she say so on Conan, she also advised other people to do so in her book Confessions of a Guidette.  To be fair to Nicole Polizzi, she was talking about unused cat litter that she waters down, but it's still not the best idea. For one thing, inhaling dust from some clumping cat litters could pose health risks. And scrubbing your face with kitty litter is just undignified.

Source: MTV
Alicia Silverstone Thinks Tampons Make You Infertile
In her book The Kind Mama: A Simple Guide to Supercharged Fertility, a Radiant Pregnancy, a Sweeter Birth, and a Healthier, More Beautiful Beginning, actress Alicia Silverstone claimed that tampons have a detrimental effect, saying, "feminine-care manufacturers aren’t required to tell you what’s in their products, which means that no one’s talking about the potential pesticide residues from non-organic cotton and the ‘fragrances’ containing hormone-upsetting, fertility-knocking phthalates that are snuggling up to your hoo-ha.”

Source: The Daily Beast

Shailene Woodley Wants You to Eat Clay
Divergent actress Shailene Woodley has said that eating clay is a good idea because it helps rid your body of "heavy metals." While ingesting a little clay every now and again isn't likely to hurt your health substantially, it can cause constipation. And it's unnecessary, as we have much better ways of gaining minerals and vitamins. As for clearing out heavy metals, the average person is very unlikely to have enough heavy metal toxins to need any additional help getting rid of them.

Source: Today
Suzanne Somers Might Not Actually Be a Hormone Therapy Expert
Actress Suzanne Somers wrote an entire book on hormone therapy, but unfortunately, Ageless: The Naked Truth About Bioidentical Hormones allegedly doesn't contain much actual truth about bioidentical hormones. Many menopausal women reportedly stopped taking these therapies after well-conducted studies revealed that they led to an increased risk of breast cancer, heart attacks, cardiovascular disease, and stroke. Even some of the doctors she wrote about in her book signed a public letter declaring much of Somers's information "scientifically unproven and dangerous."

Source: Live Science

Did Sandra Bullock Use Hemorrhoid Cream on Her Eyes?
During the filming of Miss Congeniality, Sandra Bullock said she started using hemorrhoid cream as an anti-ager. “I didn’t realize that putting hemorrhoid ointment on your face is acceptable in the beauty business," she explained. "But apparently butt-cream does help the lines around the eyes." Hemorrhoid cream is neither approved nor tested for the purpose of shrinking under-eye bags, which are caused by heredity, lack of sleep, and allergies. In fact, some strong hemorrhoid creams could damage the eyes and the sensitive skin around them.  

Source: NY Post



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