by tim » Fri Jun 19, 2026 8:16 am
The medical monopoly has gone to great lengths to vilify chlorine dioxide. Chlorine dioxide is simple, cheap, and can’t be patented.
A simple way to determine if something can actually be used to help people is to look at how the medical monopoly has persecuted it.
Great examples: ivermectin for covid, fenbenzadole for cancer, suramin for autism, chlorine dioxide for all pathogens.
https://rescue.substack.com/p/his-miss ... -and-souls
His Mission: Saving Lives and Souls With Chlorine Dioxide
In Africa, missionary Dan Healy has used chlorine dioxide for almost two decades to heal illness while also preaching the gospel. “It’s hard to say what I love more,” he said.
He may not scale buildings in a single leap. But armed with a simple pathogen-killing molecule—two atoms oxygen, one atom chlorine—he quells typhoid. He brings toddlers back from the ravages of malaria, which annually kills 425,000 African children under five years old. He takes out asthma, tapeworms, fungal infections, and whole-body rashes. He saves teeth to boot. All this with an oxidizing substance with almost no side effects that is used with government blessing to purify the water of 12 million Americans.
Granted I cannot verify all of these reports by Healy, who first told his story as “Dave the Missionary” in a 2021 documentary on chlorine dioxide called The Universal Antidote. But in addition to detailed interviews with Healy, who decided to forego anonymity for the first time, I was able to speak with key witnesses to his work.
A missionary couple who visited a pediatric ward with Healy in 2011 in Guinea-Bissau, a small country on the Atlantic Ocean south of Senegal, said they were “amazed” to see malaria quickly resolve in ill children after one chlorine dioxide treatment. Malaria infection of the brain is commonly fatal to 15 to 25 percent of children, even with hospitalization and advanced care.
An assistant who worked for Healy for six years told of successfully treating high-ranking officials in Guinea-Bissau’s ruling party—and many others—with CD for malaria, typhoid, and even diabetes. The word got out, he said, and the report that started spreading was: “That clinic is good. They have good medicine.”
A senior consultant physician in Sierra Leone, Dr. Kojo Carew, said he attended a meeting in 2025 with Healy and the country’s Deputy Minister of Health after which Healy was permitted to treat with chlorine dioxide and other natural remedies as long as he followed regulatory rules.
In his hospital, Carew’s Ebola patients were treated with an ozone and oxygen gas mixture. In the community, however, Carew, who founded the West African Society of Integrative Medicine, gave chlorine dioxide to quarantined families in three of the nation’s sixteen districts. There, hundreds and likely thousands of people had been exposed to Ebola by family members who had been taken to hospitals.
“Those in quarantine were given a single dose of CD which appeared effective in stopping the spread of the disease,” Dr. Carew told me. Other districts that did not similarly treat residents in quarantine “had a lot of problems with people coming out positive.”
As a result of that experience, Carew said he would like to see “an outside researcher” study the use of chlorine dioxide.
Although chlorine dioxide played a heroic role then against Ebola, it is still not an approved medical treatment in Sierra Leone, or elsewhere.
Healy knows this. He stays “under the radar,” avoiding local boards that monitor malaria, for example. He relies on a wide circle of contacts and carefully navigates the rules of African survival.
I had CD with me but I didn’t trust it. I thought I’m not gonna take it and went with quinine and anti-malaria drugs,” he told me. Ten days later, vomiting, feverish, and losing sight, hearing, and sleep, he decided at 2:30 in the morning, “I gotta try my own medicine.”
Within perhaps an hour, Healy fell into a restful sleep. The disease broke; it was over. To convince himself it had really worked, he later gave thirty-three malaria-positive patients chlorine dioxide in water, then tested them again the next day, he said. All were negative.
Healy had discovered first-hand why NASA in 1988 first called chlorine dioxide the “universal antidote [that] killed bacteria, viruses, and fungi on or shortly after contact, yet was nontoxic to humans, animals and plants.”
Without formal authorization but with learned clinical experience, he offered six to seven drops of chlorine dioxide in a cup of water to sick children at various malaria stages, some with bleeding lips. “You can tell just before they die,” he told me. “There’s a certain look. They can’t focus on you.”
Again and again, he saw delirious children quickly recover, “laughing and running around,” with parents “crying and hugging” their youngsters—and him.
“Just where there’s no hope, you go in and you give them something that cost me a penny per application, and you just save, save the kids,” he said. “There’s no better feeling.”
In his first ten years of treatment, Healy said he used just forty pounds of the dry material called sodium chlorite that when activated by citric or hydrochloric acid makes chlorine dioxide. That was enough to treat perhaps 80,000 to 100,000 people, he said, which may be why CD is not on any list of recommended pharmaceuticals.
It’s cheap. It’s widely available, including online. It can’t be patented. NASA’s 1988 article foresaw “broad potential” for chlorine dioxide in lung cancer, skin diseases, and herpes. That did not come to pass.
Healy follows in the footsteps of others who have observed the power of chlorine dioxide.
In the 1980s, as reported in the book The War on Chlorine Dioxide, a U.S. engineer was tasked with building a water purification facility in remote Nigeria to contain a cholera outbreak. When he mistakenly used too much chlorine dioxide to clean the water, the engineer told the book’s author Dr. Pierre Kory, he received reports that not only was cholera under control, but malaria was being eradicated. He and his team thought the government would be ecstatic. They were instead drummed out of the country.
Decades later, a 2012 Ugandan Red Cross Society study documented the resolution of malaria parasites within a day in the blood of 154 people treated with chlorine dioxide. Although the project was sanctioned and videotaped, its findings were subsequently disavowed.
In both episodes, chlorine dioxide apparently risked upsetting the tenuous social order that is Africa. For Nigerian officials, the grim reality was that malaria was nature’s way of checking human population and if cured would lead to mass starvation.
The medical monopoly has gone to great lengths to vilify chlorine dioxide. Chlorine dioxide is simple, cheap, and can’t be patented.
A simple way to determine if something can actually be used to help people is to look at how the medical monopoly has persecuted it.
Great examples: ivermectin for covid, fenbenzadole for cancer, suramin for autism, chlorine dioxide for all pathogens.
[url] https://rescue.substack.com/p/his-mission-saving-lives-and-souls[/url]
[quote] His Mission: Saving Lives and Souls With Chlorine Dioxide
In Africa, missionary Dan Healy has used chlorine dioxide for almost two decades to heal illness while also preaching the gospel. “It’s hard to say what I love more,” he said.
[/quote]
[quote] He may not scale buildings in a single leap. But armed with a simple pathogen-killing molecule—two atoms oxygen, one atom chlorine—he quells typhoid. He brings toddlers back from the ravages of malaria, which annually kills 425,000 African children under five years old. He takes out asthma, tapeworms, fungal infections, and whole-body rashes. He saves teeth to boot. All this with an oxidizing substance with almost no side effects that is used with government blessing to purify the water of 12 million Americans.
Granted I cannot verify all of these reports by Healy, who first told his story as “Dave the Missionary” in a 2021 documentary on chlorine dioxide called The Universal Antidote. But in addition to detailed interviews with Healy, who decided to forego anonymity for the first time, I was able to speak with key witnesses to his work.
A missionary couple who visited a pediatric ward with Healy in 2011 in Guinea-Bissau, a small country on the Atlantic Ocean south of Senegal, said they were “amazed” to see malaria quickly resolve in ill children after one chlorine dioxide treatment. Malaria infection of the brain is commonly fatal to 15 to 25 percent of children, even with hospitalization and advanced care.
An assistant who worked for Healy for six years told of successfully treating high-ranking officials in Guinea-Bissau’s ruling party—and many others—with CD for malaria, typhoid, and even diabetes. The word got out, he said, and the report that started spreading was: “That clinic is good. They have good medicine.”
A senior consultant physician in Sierra Leone, Dr. Kojo Carew, said he attended a meeting in 2025 with Healy and the country’s Deputy Minister of Health after which Healy was permitted to treat with chlorine dioxide and other natural remedies as long as he followed regulatory rules.
[/quote]
[quote] In his hospital, Carew’s Ebola patients were treated with an ozone and oxygen gas mixture. In the community, however, Carew, who founded the West African Society of Integrative Medicine, gave chlorine dioxide to quarantined families in three of the nation’s sixteen districts. There, hundreds and likely thousands of people had been exposed to Ebola by family members who had been taken to hospitals.
“Those in quarantine were given a single dose of CD which appeared effective in stopping the spread of the disease,” Dr. Carew told me. Other districts that did not similarly treat residents in quarantine “had a lot of problems with people coming out positive.”
As a result of that experience, Carew said he would like to see “an outside researcher” study the use of chlorine dioxide.
Although chlorine dioxide played a heroic role then against Ebola, it is still not an approved medical treatment in Sierra Leone, or elsewhere.
Healy knows this. He stays “under the radar,” avoiding local boards that monitor malaria, for example. He relies on a wide circle of contacts and carefully navigates the rules of African survival.[/quote]
[quote] I had CD with me but I didn’t trust it. I thought I’m not gonna take it and went with quinine and anti-malaria drugs,” he told me. Ten days later, vomiting, feverish, and losing sight, hearing, and sleep, he decided at 2:30 in the morning, “I gotta try my own medicine.”
Within perhaps an hour, Healy fell into a restful sleep. The disease broke; it was over. To convince himself it had really worked, he later gave thirty-three malaria-positive patients chlorine dioxide in water, then tested them again the next day, he said. All were negative.
Healy had discovered first-hand why NASA in 1988 first called chlorine dioxide the “universal antidote [that] killed bacteria, viruses, and fungi on or shortly after contact, yet was nontoxic to humans, animals and plants.”[/quote]
[quote] Without formal authorization but with learned clinical experience, he offered six to seven drops of chlorine dioxide in a cup of water to sick children at various malaria stages, some with bleeding lips. “You can tell just before they die,” he told me. “There’s a certain look. They can’t focus on you.”
Again and again, he saw delirious children quickly recover, “laughing and running around,” with parents “crying and hugging” their youngsters—and him.
“Just where there’s no hope, you go in and you give them something that cost me a penny per application, and you just save, save the kids,” he said. “There’s no better feeling.”
In his first ten years of treatment, Healy said he used just forty pounds of the dry material called sodium chlorite that when activated by citric or hydrochloric acid makes chlorine dioxide. That was enough to treat perhaps 80,000 to 100,000 people, he said, which may be why CD is not on any list of recommended pharmaceuticals.
It’s cheap. It’s widely available, including online. It can’t be patented. NASA’s 1988 article foresaw “broad potential” for chlorine dioxide in lung cancer, skin diseases, and herpes. That did not come to pass.[/quote]
[quote] Healy follows in the footsteps of others who have observed the power of chlorine dioxide.
In the 1980s, as reported in the book The War on Chlorine Dioxide, a U.S. engineer was tasked with building a water purification facility in remote Nigeria to contain a cholera outbreak. When he mistakenly used too much chlorine dioxide to clean the water, the engineer told the book’s author Dr. Pierre Kory, he received reports that not only was cholera under control, but malaria was being eradicated. He and his team thought the government would be ecstatic. They were instead drummed out of the country.
Decades later, a 2012 Ugandan Red Cross Society study documented the resolution of malaria parasites within a day in the blood of 154 people treated with chlorine dioxide. Although the project was sanctioned and videotaped, its findings were subsequently disavowed.
In both episodes, chlorine dioxide apparently risked upsetting the tenuous social order that is Africa. For Nigerian officials, the grim reality was that malaria was nature’s way of checking human population and if cured would lead to mass starvation.[/quote]