Got any Mercurochrome in your medicine cabinet? ( Archived) (3)

Nov 5, 2013 1:01 PM CST Got any Mercurochrome in your medicine cabinet?
Might be a good idea to dump it.


Dear Cecil:

I had skin surgery recently and was told to apply Mercurochrome to aid in scarless healing. The product, once widely available, is sold by only one vendor in Boise, and I'm told they manufacture their own. Another pharmacist told me they were not allowed to handle or sell it. What happened to this antiseptic that I grew up with?

— David Young, Boise, Idaho


You're dating yourself, pops. Few under age 30 have ever heard of this stuff. In 1998, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration declared that Mercurochrome, generically known as merbromin, was "not generally recognized as safe and effective" as an over-the-counter antiseptic and forbade its sale across state lines. A few traditionalists complained: Whaddya mean, not generally recognized as safe? Moms have been daubing it on their kids' owies since the Harding administration! But the more reasonable reaction was: It's about time.....

more:
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Nov 5, 2013 1:11 PM CST Got any Mercurochrome in your medicine cabinet?
montemonte
montemontemontemonteunknown, New Jersey USA114 Threads 4 Polls 5,631 Posts
Mercurochrome was used on kids because it didn't burn the skin the way Iodine does.

Nowadays hospitals and doctors used Betadyne as an antiseptic.
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Nov 5, 2013 1:40 PM CST Got any Mercurochrome in your medicine cabinet?
nokundi
nokundinokundicountryside, Hessen Germany3 Threads 2 Polls 1,368 Posts
ooby_dooby: Might be a good idea to dump it.


Dear Cecil:

I had skin surgery recently and was told to apply Mercurochrome to aid in scarless healing. The product, once widely available, is sold by only one vendor in Boise, and I'm told they manufacture their own. Another pharmacist told me they were not allowed to handle or sell it. What happened to this antiseptic that I grew up with?

— David Young, Boise, Idaho

You're dating yourself, pops. Few under age 30 have ever heard of this stuff. In 1998, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration declared that Mercurochrome, generically known as merbromin, was "not generally recognized as safe and effective" as an over-the-counter antiseptic and forbade its sale across state lines. A few traditionalists complained: Whaddya mean, not generally recognized as safe? Moms have been daubing it on their kids' owies since the Harding administration! But the more reasonable reaction was: It's about time.....

more:


i would never use it,coz it contains mercury !!
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