THE international police agency, Interpol, has issued a global alert over a potentially lethal diet pill which is believed to have caused the death of a British woman. Eloise Parry, a 21-year-old student from the UK, “burned up from the inside” and VANCOUVER (NEWS1130) – Have you ever ordered Diet Pills online and wondered what might be in them? Interpol is out with a warning, sent to police forces in nearly 200 countries, cautioning you about a potentially deadly chemical. Police in the UK believe Participants were asked if they'd ever had an eating disorder, and if they'd vomited, used laxatives, or taken Diet Pills in the last month, in addition to other questions about substance use, general mental health, cantikual history, and nutrition. Interpol has issued a global alert over the threat posed by the "diet pills" that claimed the life of a British woman. The world police agency has raised the alarm with forces in 190 countries after the toxic pesticide dinitrophenol was linked to the death Watchdogs at the US FTC (Federal Trade Commission) have obtained a restraining order against alleged diet pill scammers. The “Com Spammers”, nick-named over their use of domain names in the form of com-XXX.net, where XXX are three or four random Last month, Eloise Aimee Parry, a 21-year-old student from Shropshire, died after taking "diet pills" she purchased on the internet. Now, Interpol has issued a global alert over the threat posed by the pills. The world police agency has raised the alarm .
A British woman has died after taking a lethal dose of Diet Pills that contain the toxic chemical dinitrophenol, also known as DNP. Doctors were unable to save 21-year-old Eloise Aimee Parry, who died at the hospital on April 12 after taking eight diet Police are investigating the death of a woman in the United Kingdom after she took diet pills that she bought online, British authorities said. The West Mercia Police Department in western England issued a warning this week after Eloise Parry, 21, died on A 21-year-old woman died recently after she ingested diet pills made with an "extremely dangerous" industrial chemical. On April 12, Eloise Aimee Parry of Shrewsbury, England, took eight diet pills containing dinitrophenol or DNP, according to a statement June 27, 2012 -- For the first time in more than a decade, the FDA has approved a new drug to help people lose weight. Today, Arena Pharmaceuticals' Belviq (lorcaserin hydrochloride) became the first prescription weight loss drug approved by federal .
Thursday, July 2, 2015
Diet Pills
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