Advertisement
The Philippines
This Week in AsiaPeople

In Philippines, Robin Padilla’s wife Mariel’s ‘gluta drips’ scandal spotlights deadly skin-whitening treatment

  • In a since-deleted Instagram post showing Mariel hooked up to an IV in a Senate office, she told her 4 million followers she never misses ‘a drip’
  • So-called gluta drips are sought after in the Philippines for their supposed ability to whiten skin, despite doctors’ warnings they can be deadly

4-MIN READ4-MIN
2
Filipino model, endorser, television host and actress Mariel Padilla, also known professionally as Mariel Rodriguez. Her husband is Philippine Senator Robin Padilla. Photo: X/marieltpadilla
Raissa Robles
Popular Filipino actress Mariel Padilla has whipped up a storm of criticism in the Philippines after posting a photo of herself appearing to receive a controversial skin-whitening intravenous therapy inside her senator-husband’s office.

In a since-deleted Instagram post, Padilla told her 4 million followers on Wednesday last week that she never misses “a drip because it really helps in soooo many ways”.

The photo showed the 39-year-old receiving the treatment – which appeared to be a “gluta drip”, referring to a mixture of glutathione, an antioxidant, and vitamin C that’s marketed as an energy and metabolism booster which also whitens skin – in the office of her husband, an actor turned senator, with the Senate seal and national flag as a backdrop.

Mariel Padilla is seen hooked up to an intravenous drip in the office of her husband, Philippine Senator Robin Padilla, in this screengrab of her since-deleted Instagram post. Photo: Instagram/marieltpadilla
Mariel Padilla is seen hooked up to an intravenous drip in the office of her husband, Philippine Senator Robin Padilla, in this screengrab of her since-deleted Instagram post. Photo: Instagram/marieltpadilla

Medical professionals panned the Padillas for setting a bad example by promoting so-called gluta drips, which are highly sought-after in the Philippines for their supposed health benefits – despite not being approved for skin lightening and doctors’ warnings that they can be deadly. Mariel later denied that the IV in the picture contained glutathione.

Advertisement

In January, a 39-year-old woman died in suburban Quezon City hours after receiving an intravenous [IV] injection of glutathione and stem cells, health reform advocate Dr Tony Leachon, a former president of the Philippine College of Physicians, reminded users on X. The health department is still investigating the cause of her death.

At the time, Philippine Health Secretary Teodoro Herbosa warned that the treatment “will whiten your skin and make you look really Caucasian, but it can damage your kidneys and kill you”.

“Sadly, we see a proliferation of establishments offering this service – most not even manned by [licensed] physicians,” Dr Maria Angela Lavadia, past president of the Philippine Dermatological Society, told This Week in Asia.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x