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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

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
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

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.

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”.

How ‘whitening’ creams can damage your skin, and what to use instead

“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.

Neither glutathione nor vitamin C has been approved by the Philippines’ Food and Drug Administration for skin lightening, Lavadia noted, citing insufficient “evidence-based data and long-term results for this indication”.

Leachon told This Week in Asia that injectable glutathione had been approved “as an adjunct treatment” for cancer therapy, but warned that “no safe level has been set” for any off-label use outside cancer treatment.

He added that he thought it was “wrong to promote off-label products” on social media and said the Senate was “not the proper venue to do such irresponsible acts”.

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Padilla, who is a heavy endorser of health and beauty products that she also sells on live streams, said in her Instagram post that she was receiving the treatment in her husband’s office because she was at the Senate to personally root for the passage of a law to protect workers in the entertainment industry.

Her husband Robin – who with over 26 million votes, received more than other candidate in the 2022 Senate election – initially chided critics of his wife’s viral post, writing in a text message to the Philippine Daily Inquirer newspaper: “I’m really laughing over this”.

“This political issue is funny, my goodness, if they saw anything bad in the photo, my apologies,” he said. “My wife loves to promote good looks and good health.”

The promotion and sale of unregistered health products in the Philippines is punishable by up to 10 years in prison and a fine of up to 10 million pesos (US$178,000).

How the Philippines became a ‘beauty pageant superpower’

But health chief Herbosa told the Philippine Star newspaper over the weekend that Padilla was not liable for prosecution.

“It’s more an ethical issue. [It] means a doctor prescribed [to her] a drug as ‘off label’ use,” he said, adding that she could even sue the doctor if she was harmed.

Nancy Binay, chairwoman of the Senate ethics committee, said on Friday last week that her committee would “need to closely look into” the matter “because it involves issues of conduct, integrity, and reputation of the institution, and matters that concern health and safety”.

Public officials in the Philippines are barred from using their public office for private gain under ethical standards and a code of conduct established by Republic Act 6713.

Let us think that being a celebrity has its consequences, especially if your spouse is a senator
Nancy Binay, Philippine Senate ethics committee chair

“As public figures, we should be aware of our responsibilities to the public,” Binay said. “We might be promoting something that is banned and illegal, and people might think that it’s OK. Let us think that being a celebrity has its consequences, especially if your spouse is a senator.”

This is not the first time that Senator Padilla, who likes to be referred to as “Robinhood” since cultivating an image as a bad boy with a heart of gold through his film roles, has had a brush with scandal.

In 1994, while running for a provincial governor post, he was found with a cache of unlicensed high-powered firearms in his car and convicted of illegal gun possession, carrying a sentence of up to 21 years. But he walked free four years later after then-President Fidel Ramos gave him a conditional pardon, which was upgraded to a full pardon by former President Rodrigo Duterte, allowing Padilla to run for the Senate.

The actor-turned-senator was also scolded by a colleague last year for combing his moustache during a Senate hearing, with Padilla shooting back that there were no rules barring him from preening himself in the chamber.

In Philippine election, a reel thin line between actors and politicians

Both Padillas were more contrite on Monday, however, with the senator releasing a statement expressing his “sincere apologies” for the IV incident, while his wife posted on Instagram that “it was never my intention to malign nor undermine the integrity and dignity of the Senate. I want to extend my sincerest apologies to all concerned.”

Mariel Padilla later told local media that the IV drip she had in her husband’s office was filled with a vitamin C infusion and did not contain glutathione.

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