With the advent of industrial scale bear bile farming, producers were left with a problem – how to expand their market beyond traditional medicine?
Bear bile has been used in traditional Asian medicine for thousands of years and contains high levels of ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) known to be useful for treating liver and gall bladder conditions. However, there are many readily available alternatives with the same medicinal properties.
But, wondered the bile farmers, how to sell more?
The answer was simply to market the substance as a general cure-all. Unchecked, this pervasive myth led to the surplus of bile making it’s way into some truly unexpected – and always completely unnecessary – products.
Bear bile is often mixed with rice wine. It’s not entirely clear what possible health benefits this is believed to have, although animal-part infused liquors are quite common in traditional medicine as curative elixirs. Worse still, some establishments choose to steep a bear paw, and have even been known to steep an entire bear carcass, in a vat of rice liquor. This particularly rare practice has no basis in traditional or modern medicine.
To further corner the market, bear bile has also been used as a hangover treatment. Thankfully, doctors in China have countered with their belief that taking bear bile for a hangover can actually have extremely dangerous side effects for a liver already compromised with over use of alcohol.
In the past, bear bile appeared in some Chinese brands of toothpaste. However, hundreds of other brands recommended by dentists successfully produce toothpaste without bear bile.
In contrast, Animals Asia vets are operating month by month on the broken teeth of moon bears rescued from the bear bile industry. On bile farms, bears literally try to chew through their cage bars to escape.
Cruelty free beauty this isn’t. It’s hard to imagine that it works. It’s hard to imagine that it matters that much. Beauty is so much more than skin deep.
It is highly unlikely that any human will ever exhaust the enormous varieties of tea available in the world today. Once your brew of choice has been customised with milk, ginger, sweeteners or any variety of fruit and herb, the options become essentially limitless. Anyone witnessing the black sludge we’ve seen from diseased gall bladders would certainly see it as less than refreshing.
Consider for a moment that bear bile today is extracted in highly unsanitary conditions and often contains traces of infected blood and pus. Not a good look.