**Fact Check Rating: FALSE** ❌
Fact Check Rating: FALSE ❌
Viral Snippet: *“BREAKING: The FDA has issued a nationwide recall of all pare products, including food, supplements, and skincare items, after a study linked a common pare derivative to sudden liver failure in 38 people across four states. The CDC is urging everyone to check their pantries and medicine cabinets immediately.”
Why It’s Fake:
- No such thing as “pare”: “Pare” is not a recognized food, chemical, or product category regulated by the FDA. The word is most commonly used as a verb (to trim or cut off the outer skin of something). There is no FDA-recognized “pare product” to recall.
- No credible source: No mention is made of which specific chemical or ingredient (e.g., “pare extract,” “pare acid”) is supposedly dangerous. No specific states, case numbers, or study dates are given—hallmarks of viral fear-mongering.
- Misleading acronym: Some users may confuse “pare” with “PARE” (a safety program or acronym), but no recall notices from the FDA, CDC, or any public health agency reference the term.
Verdict: This is a fabricated alert designed to scare people into sharing without verification. Check FDA.gov for real recalls—none matching this description exist. Do not share.