My Detailed Response to "Hit" on Ozonated Glycerin from a Noted Self-Described Ozone Expert.
#29 2024 The Rowen Premium Report
Dear Subscriber,
[If you are able to read to the end, you will see photos of a most unusual RAPID regression of a severe basal cell skin carcinoma in an active patient we are treating. Terri has done some fine OG work on this one.]
Several lay readers here, and several ozone colleagues, forwarded me a post, which was put up in the past few days by one well known in the ozone community as a self-described ozone expert. In the post, the author took some swipes at ozonated glycerin, likely in response to my recent Substack reports to you, and telling his/her readers to be cautious for the reason that the author is personally quite sensitive to aldehydes, and made the presumption that the reaction of ozone and glycerin, a tri-alcohol, creates aldehydes, to which the author is allergic.
I definitely respect and study the experience of a recipient of a therapy. But in this case, I am saddened that this well followed reporter chose to base what seems to be a hit on OG based on personal experience, and closed with what appeared to be a personal hit on me:
“We definitely need more feedback from the general public instead of from people who sell the very thing they are raving about.”
Had the author carefully read my posts, the author should have seen that I am not selling the very thing I am “raving” about, but steering people to vendors. We have made some OG privately for really urgent needs, but not for anything or anyone else. We can’t wait for two companies to get it to market. I’ve told you about PURO3.com. They will have, on their website early next week, a place where you can pre-order and obtain a discount with the code REDWOOD.
SimplyO3.com informed me this week that it also is in production and will have OG available. I am delighted that at least two companies are or will be in the market. Competition is great for all and there is plenty of need that will keep both companies busy. You can get a discount with Simply O3 using this site: https://lddy.no/1fidt or at their regular site using the code DRROWEN. Full disclosure – we do get a small commission from such sales. We are on good terms with both companies and both support my podcast. SimplyO3 plans a chemical analysis of final product OG, including what we are making.
But this hardly translates to us selling the “very product”. If we were motivated by cashing in on what we sell. With this stuff so apparently great, I’d rent an empty apple processing warehouse in my area (plenty now as apples are replaced by wine grapes) and go into full bore commercial production. I don’t think I could keep it is stock, even selling it retail, and even in competition with the other guys.
Now that said, let’s look a little closer at the concerns and personal experiences of the author of the piece.
The author’s concern is that aldehydes are being made, and the author has problems with aldehydes, and proceeds to scare off the reader from OG and seemingly encourages the readers to stick to the straight and narrow “ozone” therapy.
I don’t know the numbers of ozone treatments the author has personally provided, if any, and if the author is even doing hands on practice. In summer of 2026, I will have had 40 continuous years doing ozone therapy and tens of thousands of treatments under my belt, if not more, in many thousands of different patients. Howard Robins, my good friend, has had hundreds of thousands of treatments under his belt. We both have seen what appears to be ozone allergy in perhaps two patients apiece in all these years. We have had a few more with heparin allergy, so we cannot to standard blood treatments in the latter. For the small handful with what appears to be a true ozone allergy out of tens of thousands, the reactions were that of benign rash in one and temporary pain in another, and we simply do ozone no more on them.
Actually, while I fully disagree with the stated author, the post did make me rethink potential problems with ozone therapy. First, ozone therapy appears to be one of the safest, if not the safest medical therapy the world has known. We tell all our clients, and they sign the informed consent, that anyone can have an untoward reaction to anything, including ozone. But as mentioned, it has been exceptionally RARE. But the aldehyde issue is interesting. And, what follows is why. (The Premium section gets the added benefit of my time in putting the rest of this report for you., and also some photos of what appears to be an amazing skin cancer response to OG at the end of this post. Thank you so very much for your support.) I also recall that the same author provided some information on complicated ozone machines many years ago which I also believe was not based on study, physics, or knowledge, but again, personal considerations or bias, leaving the less educated reader with mis-information, and possibly otherwise getting an inferior ozone treatment.
Aldehydes can be problematic. Not all of them, but lots. For example, the simplest, formaldehyde,