Skeptoid - Skeptoid #405: Aromatherapy: Sniffing Essential Oils Aired: 2014-03-11 Duration: 16:40 === The Resurgence of Aromatherapy (06:18) === [00:00:03] We're always searching for magically easy solutions to difficult problems. [00:00:08] And many of us are particularly drawn towards solutions that we perceive to be all natural or untainted by human technology. [00:00:17] One modality that neatly checks both of these boxes is aromatherapy. [00:00:22] The idea that merely smelling the essence of various plants can treat a vast range of medical conditions. [00:00:30] We're pointing our skeptical eye at it today on Skeptoid. [00:00:38] Hi, I'm Alex Goldman. [00:00:40] You may know me as the host of Reply All, but I'm done with that. [00:00:44] I'm doing something else now. [00:00:46] I've started a new podcast called Hyperfixed. [00:00:48] On every episode of Hyperfixed, listeners write in with their problems and I try to solve them. [00:00:53] Some massive and life-altering, and some so minuscule it'll boggle your mind. [00:00:57] No matter the problem, no matter the size, I'm here for you. [00:01:01] That's Hyperfixed, the new podcast from Radiotopia. [00:01:04] Find it wherever you listen to podcasts or at hyperfixedpod.com. [00:01:14] You're listening to Skeptoid. [00:01:15] I'm Brian Dunning from Skeptoid.com. [00:01:19] Aromatherapy, Sniffing Essential Oils. [00:01:23] The popularity of essences of aromatic plants appears to have skyrocketed in recent years. [00:01:29] Normally, they're used as simple fragrances, in perfumes, incense, soaps and candles, or even potpourri. [00:01:36] But their recent rise may be due in part to stinkier practices. [00:01:42] A lot of people are now turning to essential oils for medical purposes. [00:01:46] Some believe they promote general wellness. [00:01:49] Some believe they boost the immune system. [00:01:52] And some depend on specific aromatherapies to treat very specific diseases. [00:01:58] Are they right to do so? [00:02:01] Well, let's look exactly at what an essential oil is. [00:02:05] First of all, the word essential means that the oil contains the essence of whatever plant it's from. [00:02:10] It does not mean that it's essential, as in necessary for health. [00:02:15] Leaves, stems, flowers, or whatever part of the desired plant is placed in a distillation vessel with steam. [00:02:22] The heat releases the volatile organic compounds from the plant matter. [00:02:26] Volatile means they exist as a vapor at room temperature. [00:02:30] Volatile organic compounds are what goes into your nose when you smell a flower. [00:02:35] So these compounds are distilled into a liquid, which we colloquially call the essence of the plant. [00:02:42] Finally, to make a nice packageable product of desired consistency and concentration, the essence is usually mixed with an odorless carrier oil. [00:02:51] Then, voila, we have what's called an essential oil, strong with the smell of the plant it's made from. [00:02:59] It can be a massage oil. [00:03:01] It can be the scent added to incense. [00:03:03] It can be added to bathwater, to soaps, or to candles. [00:03:06] You can put some in your tea, or you can dab some on your skin for the fragrance. [00:03:10] Many such aromas are delightful, even pleasurable. [00:03:14] For a thousand years, people have been willing to pay a fair price for essential oils. [00:03:19] But in recent years, prices have skyrocketed, especially among allegedly premium oils. [00:03:26] Why might this be? [00:03:28] The plants have not become any more scarce, and the production methods have only become more efficient and cheaper, particularly with our global economy providing the best access ever to bargain basement oils produced in developing countries. [00:03:43] The answer is a resurgence of aromatherapy in the new age and alternative medicine communities. [00:03:49] But before we talk about its resurgence, let's see how it first became a thing at all. [00:03:56] The principal anecdote cited by virtually all credulous articles on essential oils comes from the perfume industry. [00:04:03] In 1910, French perfumist René Maurice Getfussy was working on a new fragrance when he accidentally burned his hand and quickly thrust it into what he thought was a jar of water, then realized that it was a jar of lavender oil. [00:04:18] This episode is known only from Getfussy's own account of it, written 27 years later in his 1937 book, Aromatherapie, Le Ouil essential, a homane végétal. [00:04:30] But it was 40 years later, in 1977, when Americans were going crazy embracing anything and everything alternative they could find, that aromatherapy reached the English-speaking world. [00:04:43] Robert Tisserand wrote the book Art of Aromatherapy, the healing and beautifying properties of the essential oils of flowers and herbs. [00:04:52] And Americans first learned that the words aroma and therapy could go together. [00:04:57] Tisserand described 29 essential oils and more than 100 medical conditions he believed they could treat. [00:05:05] Essential oils were no longer just a way to make your bathtub smell good. [00:05:09] They became an alternative medical treatment for just about any disease you might have thought you had. [00:05:15] Similar books have flooded the market ever since he first broke the dam. [00:05:21] Scientific studies on the subject of aromatherapy have been extraordinarily scarce, and it's with good reason. [00:05:28] When you smell something, the aroma is triggering your sense of smell. [00:05:32] This requires very few molecules. [00:05:35] But when we administer a substance with the hope of causing a pharmacological effect, we generally require a much greater quantity. [00:05:42] It is the chemical interaction between the compound and the body that produces the desired effect. [00:05:48] Merely smelling the compound's few volatile molecules is not an effective delivery mechanism. [00:05:54] Some aromatherapists have pointed to smelling salts as precedents, but this is an invalid comparison. [00:06:01] Smelling salts irritate the nose with ammonia, like slapping someone to wake them up. [00:06:06] The ammonia is not intended as a systemic treatment. [00:06:11] So with virtually no valid science or theory supporting the claim that essential oils have medical benefits, why then have they enjoyed a resurgence in the market? === Why MLMs Sell Cheap Oils (08:09) === [00:06:21] It came via a pathway familiar to skeptoid listeners, multi-level marketing. [00:06:28] There's no need to go into great detail on multi-level marketing here, or network marketing, or independent sales, or product consulting, or whatever the given company's term of choice is, because we've already done so in Skeptoid episode 176. [00:06:44] The proposition is always roughly the same. [00:06:47] Become an independent distributor and earn a commission not only from your own sales, but of those of all other salespeople you also recruit. [00:06:55] You can't lose, according to the pitch. [00:06:58] But according to surveys of participants and the mathematical modeling that supports those findings, the fact is that you can't win. [00:07:06] You usually have to pay the company a fee to become a salesperson. [00:07:10] In the legitimate business world, companies should be paying their salespeople. [00:07:14] And you're required to make minimum monthly purchases, guaranteeing the company steady sales of grossly overpriced merchandise, bought and paid out of your pocket. [00:07:24] Surveys show that hardly any distributors ever sell a single product to another person, instead having to consume them all themselves. [00:07:33] And that 99.95% of multi-level marketing participants lose money doing so. [00:07:40] Both Consumer Reports and the Federal Trade Commission advise against ever joining any multi-level marketing program. [00:07:52] Hey everyone, I want to remind you about a truly unique and once-in-a-lifetime adventure. [00:07:58] Join me and Mediterranean archaeologist Dr. Flint Dibble for a skeptoid sailing adventure through the Mediterranean Sea aboard the SV Royal Clipper, the world's largest full-rigged sailing ship. [00:08:11] This is also the only opportunity you'll have to hear Flint and I talk about our experiences when we both went on Joe Rogan to represent the causes of science and reality against whatever it is that you get when you're thrown into that lion pit. [00:08:26] We set sail from Malagas, Spain on April 18th, 2026 and finished the adventure in Nice, France on April 25th. [00:08:35] You'll enjoy a fascinating skeptical mini-conference at sea. [00:08:39] You'll visit amazing ports along the Spanish and French coasts and Flint will be our exclusive onboard expert sharing the real archaeology and history about every stop. [00:08:50] We've got special side quests and extra skeptical content planned at each port. [00:08:55] This is a true sailing ship. [00:08:57] You can climb the rat lines to the crow's nest, handle the sails. [00:09:01] You can even take the helm and steer. [00:09:03] This is a real bucket list adventure you don't want to miss. [00:09:07] But cabins are selling fast and this ship does always sell out. [00:09:11] Act now or you'll miss this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. [00:09:15] Get the full details and book your cabin at skeptoid.com slash adventures. [00:09:21] Hope to see you on board. [00:09:23] That's skeptoid.com slash adventures. [00:09:32] The simple fact is that MLM companies are about fooling their customers into thinking that buying their product will make them into wealthy distributors. [00:09:41] They are not about the products themselves. [00:09:44] The products, in fact, don't even matter. [00:09:46] They're almost always some generic low-end product, mass-produced overseas, then marketed with miraculous claims designed to excite the emotions of potential new distributor customers who believe they're going to become rich. [00:10:01] As a result, we often see that MLM products are actually cheap products. [00:10:06] Fruit drinks, soaps and detergents, vitamins, lotions. [00:10:10] The product itself is never important in multi-level marketing. [00:10:13] An MLM program is just as successful or unsuccessful with essential oils as it would be with fruit juice, sneakers, or beer koozies. [00:10:23] It just so happens that essential oils are what a particular few MLM companies chose this time around to ensnare distributors into monthly buying contracts. [00:10:35] The two biggest MLM companies pushing essential oils are Young Living and doTERRA. [00:10:41] Both carefully avoid making untrue and illegal health claims about their products on their websites, which at first glance might seem counterintuitive because those health claims are what sell the products. [00:10:53] This is one powerful reason that manufacturers choose to go with an MLM model. [00:10:59] The products are instead sold by large numbers of independent distributors who, as independent business people, are free to make any claims they like. [00:11:09] It's just as illegal for independent distributors to make untrue health claims about their products, but in practice, the Federal Trade Commission will never catch up with all the millions of MLM people out there. [00:11:20] In fact, MLM companies depend on their distributors to make such claims because they know very well that personal testimonials and anecdotes from friends are far more effective sales methods than traditional marketing. [00:11:34] But the fact that a product is sold via network marketing does not by itself prove that the product is medically worthless. [00:11:42] Even the fact that no decent research has ever found it to be efficacious as a medical treatment does not prove it invalid. [00:11:49] For my money, the biggest red flag surrounding essential oil claims is that they're so diverse. [00:11:55] These personal anecdotes and testimonials are all over the map, beginning with Ms. Year Getfus's finding that lavender oil cures burns. [00:12:04] Other anecdotes have found lavender oil to treat insomnia, and others to produce wakefulness. [00:12:12] There's a great example on Chad Jones' Skeptoid blog article about essential oils. [00:12:17] He mentioned tea tree oil, and commenters chimed in with the following uses. [00:12:23] It cures warts. [00:12:24] It's an antimicrobial. [00:12:26] It alleviates shingles. [00:12:27] It treats dandruff, oral cancer, staph infection, candida, plaque, and gingivitis. [00:12:35] Maybe it is an effective treatment for all of those things and has just eluded science so far. [00:12:40] But more likely, people reporting the anecdotes were mistaken. [00:12:45] As you read accounts of people using essential oils on the internet, keep in mind that there's virtually no consistency among the reports. [00:12:53] The next time you hear someone say that essential oil so-and-so successfully treated their child's so-and-so condition, check the internet and I can virtually guarantee that you'll find someone who found that same oil equally effective for some condition that's the polar opposite. [00:13:12] However, there is one strong reason why those who like them should go out and buy them. [00:13:17] They smell good. [00:13:19] Smells are perhaps the most evocative of senses, suggesting fond memories, even contributing to mood. [00:13:25] If grandmother's house smelled like lavender, then some lavender potpourri or incense in your own house may well contribute to a relaxing afternoon. [00:13:34] But as Stephen Novella pointed out in an article, this is not an example of therapy. [00:13:39] It's not a medical intervention. [00:13:42] He discussed one study that tried to find out if lavender would help patients with anxiety. [00:13:48] Although this study did not show aromatherapy to be effective based on statistical analysis, patients did generally report the lavender scent to be pleasant. [00:13:59] In other words, pleasing aromas are good enough as pleasing aromas. [00:14:03] We need not pretend that they also confer medical benefits. [00:14:09] In my research, I found that Harriet Hall's article on science-based medicine concluded by quoting Lynn McCutcheon's final paragraph in Skeptical Inquirer. [00:14:18] I wouldn't be able to construct a more succinct and effective conclusion, so if I might be so bold, I'm going to follow both of their example. [00:14:26] All of this sounds as though I am strongly opposed to the use of essential oils. === Skepticism Is Best Medicine (02:08) === [00:14:31] I'm not. [00:14:32] If it pleases you to put some in your bathwater or have a little rubbed on your back once in a while, by all means, go ahead. [00:14:39] It is not the odor that arises from these fragrances that is troubling. [00:14:43] It is the stench arising from the unwarranted claims made about them. [00:14:49] Whenever you hear a miracle claim for a product that's always seemed ordinary enough to you, be skeptical. [00:14:56] It's always more likely that its obvious use is the true one. [00:15:05] I need to give big thanks to those of you who support Skeptoid financially through the monthly micropayments. [00:15:11] Skeptoid has continued as long as it has only because of you. [00:15:16] You have my gratitude and please introduce yourself if you run into me at a conference. [00:15:22] You're listening to Skeptoid. [00:15:24] I'm Brian Dunning from Skeptoid.com. [00:15:33] Hello everyone, this is Adrian Hill from Skookum Studios in Calgary, Canada, the land of maple syrup and mousse. [00:15:42] And I'm here to ask you to consider becoming a premium member of Skeptoid for as little as $5 per month. [00:15:51] And that's only the cost of a couple of Tim Horton's double doubles. [00:15:55] And that's Canadian for coffee with double cream and sugar. [00:16:00] Why support Skeptoid? [00:16:02] If you are like me and don't like ads, but like extended versions of each episode, Premium is for you. [00:16:08] If you want to support a worthwhile non-profit that combats pseudoscience, promotes critical thinking, and provides free access to teachers to use the podcast in the classroom via the Teacher's Toolkit, then sign up today. [00:16:22] Remember that skepticism is the best medicine. [00:16:26] Next to giggling, of course. [00:16:28] Until next time, this is Adrienne Hill. [00:16:39] From PRX