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Editorial: Don’t be a guinea pig

Published Monday, June 29, 2009

From a Sleepy Eye boy and his family seeking “natural” cancer treatments to tens of millions of Americans spending billions of dollars on supplements and homeopathic remedies, alternative medicine is a hot topic.

And for most Americans, a confusing one.

No wonder. The advertising used with dietary supplements and homeopathic remedies is filled with claims of improving health with products made from “natural” ingredients. Add to that countless Web sites glorifying the products and attesting to their wonders, and it’s no wonder many people turn to them instead of traditional medicine.

Luckily, a large majority of the products, while probably ineffective, at least do little or no harm.

Or, you might lose your sense of smell, become permanently damaged or even die.

So why are so many potentially dangerous products allowed on the shelves? Because they have virtually no regulation.

Federal law gives a pass to homeopathic remedies — those that contain highly diluted drugs made from natural ingredients — as well as to dietary supplements. The manufacturers don’t have to prove their product provides any benefit, they don’t have to prove it’s safe, they don’t have to test it, they don’t even have to list all the ingredients.

Only after a product harms someone can the FDA step in to order it pulled.

For consumers, that’s a frightening prospect. By using many of the products, they are making themselves scientific test cases.

An Associated Press investigation found that many of the ingredients in homeopathic medicines are derived from diseased tissues or formulated from powerful poisons like strychnine or snake venom.

For many of the remedies, the only active ingredient — which doesn’t have to be listed — is alcohol. The only therapeutic benefit users are getting is a buzz.

It’s clear regulations of homeopathic remedies and dietary supplements need to be tightened up. It’s also likely that with the major problems facing the nation, it won’t be a topic to soon rise to the top of the pile in Congress.

But consumers can at least protect themselves and their families. There is no magic way to drop weight or end a cold — at least not any that have been proven and tested as safe.

Just because products tout themselves as safe, natural and effective doesn’t mean they are.

There’s no need for you to make yourself a guinea pig.

— Mankato Free Press, June 20


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Comments

Posted by None (anonymous) on June 29, 2009 at 11:32 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Baycol, Vioxx, and the oral polio vaccine (among many others) were all FDA-approved yet eventually pulled because they were dangerous. An FDA approval doesn't mean squat these days.

Posted by Mike_Dean (anonymous) on June 30, 2009 at 12:34 a.m. (Suggest removal)

I think there is a fundamental conceptual crutch in this opinion, it being that we must rely on the FDA or government to step in and regulate. Did you know that the bark of a willow tree is what aspirin is? And did you also know that for many years it went undiscovered by the FDA, and people relied on it as a spooky homeopathic drug sold only by the dankest of apothecaries? Yeah you cannot rely on the gov. to come up and or approve with/of miracle cures in fact the government stood by the use of cocaine in coca-cola as a cure to migraines and such for quite some time. I often rant about no government and this is another to add to the bunch. I think that people with a bit of education and trust in certain reliable sources can and will out do the big man in Washington on all matters including health.

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