London mum and kids drank urine for 4 days after being told it was Covid cure

There’s been a lot of misinformation about Covid and vaccines swirling around on social media.

It’s not always easy to know who or what to trust.

But this shocking example shows why you shouldn’t always trust info about Covid even if it’s sent to you by friends and family.

In a bizarre case, a London mother and her children drank urine for four days after she was sent fake news suggesting it was a “cure for Covid”, according to a health watchdog.

The mum said her main source of information about the virus was a friend or relative who forwarded other people’s recommendations to her.

She told health investigators from health watchdog, Healthwatch Central West London, that: “Some of the videos she received discussed drinking your own urine each morning as a cure for Covid-19.”

Do you feel there’s been a lot of misinformation about Covid? Email your story to [email protected]

The woman who is not named in the investigators’ reports “said that she and her children did that for four days”.

It’s not known why they stopped drinking it after four days though.

‘Dangerous vaccinations’

The mother also told investigators that she believed “vaccinations would be introduced that would be dangerous for her family”.

She said she “trusts traditional cures instead”.

Olivia Clymer, the CEO of HCWL and the report’s co-author, reported the comments saying: “We were told of a stigma associated with contracting coronavirus, and also of the fake remedies and conspiracies shared via WhatsApp. This, coupled with a lack of trust in ‘official’ channels of information, presents a problem that needs highlighting and addressing.”

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Healthwatch teamed up with French African Welfare Association (FAWA) and other organisations to talk to more than 100 people about their experience of life during the pandemic, with an additional focus on Black and minority ethnic communities.

‘Alternative information shared via WhatsApp’

The report where the above comments are found, is due to be discussed by Westminster City Council’s adult and public health scrutiny committee. (Thurs Feb 18).

FAWA highlighted “the prevalence of alternative information shared via WhatsApp”.

“This information often suggests false, alternative treatments which have no scientific and empirical background,” said Ms Clymer.

It comes as Westminster Council and health campaigners are fighting back against misinformation which they fear is putting people off getting the coronavirus vaccine.

‘Stress, isolation, uncertainty’

People also told Healthwatch about the social stigma they experienced if relatives had died of coronavirus.

The report also laid bare the amount of digital exclusion as lockdown saw more and more services offered online.

“Unfamiliarity with technology, or a lack of access to it, can have knock-on effects,” it reads.

Others interviewed talked about “stress, isolation and uncertainty” when using such technology.

One member of LEGS, an exercise group for people who had a stroke or neurological condition said: “I am not young, so using all this new technology is very stressful for me.”

Others however said phone or video GP appointments were helpful, although some resorted to the phone for help with tech.

And people were also experiencing mental health issues – including feeling very isolated.

Fear of catching Covid was the largest cause of stress, and 63 per cent or 45 people, questioned by Breath Easy Westminster said it was a huge concern.

One man told FAWA that “self-isolation affected him badly. He said he found himself sometimes screaming at home because of the anxiety, often for no reason at all.” He was awaiting an appointment with a psychiatrist when he was interviewed.

Ms Clymer said: “What has really stood out in what we are hearing from residents is how many people have noted minor deteriorations in their mental health.”

Healthwatch is continuing its research into how the pandemic is affecting people’s lives and is planning more discussion groups.

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