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YOUR FREEDOM IS IN JEOPARDY?
Dear Friend
You may be interested in this, especially if you are in America.
If you have any information or comments we would love to hear from you.
kind regards,
Lynda and Scott BallardWhat if we were not allowed to practice Aromatherapy?
Watch the Codex Video at http://www.healthfreedomusa.org/index.php
Copy the pages and video and put them on your web sites.
Turn up the volume and speak to a friend about the video and sign the petitions:
- http://www.healthfreedomusa.org/index.php?page_id=184
- http://www.democracyinaction.org/healthfreedomusa/campaign.jsp?campaign_KEY=7185&t=
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codex_Alimentarius (read the External Links at the bottom of the page.)
What if we were not allowed to practice Aromatherapy?Codex is moving in and trying to past legistration with the FDA, which will undermine all Alternative Therapies.
Codex also wants the use of the most dangerous pesticides, such as DDT.
- US FDA Guidance for CAM Products and Regulation
- http://www.healthfreedomusa.org/index.php/?cat=20
Don't forget what you know for Fahrenheit 454 is knocking at all doors.
Whatever country you are from, Food and Nature should not be the domain of an individual or group to dictate choice, but freedom of choice in regards to Food and Nature should be for all individuals and groups.This is a serious threat to our freedom of choice of food and alternative therapies! Listen to these words and go to the links and be brave enough to read and act. YOU ONLY have DAYS to make a difference. Make your words known to those who make the laws.
Use all your powers of Love, creative visualization, communicative and networking skills to stop Codex.1. Sign the Citizen’s Petition Now.
The most important thing you can do right now is to read and sign the Citizen’s Petition!
Dear Member
Immediate Action Needed - Please Sign the Petition in Cropwatch's email: http://www.democracyinaction.org/healthfreedomusa/campaign.jsp?campaign_KEY=7185&t=
Please find below an email from Cropwatch drawing our attention to the attached upcoming US Draft Guidance for Industry on Complementary & Alternative Medicine Products. Our Technical Director has advised that this could have a knock-on effect for the UK as the US situation appears to involve all alternative/CAM practices and refers to something called 'CAM products' for the first time in US, so aromatherapy in the US could be affected. It could be that FDA are testing the water given that the US appears to be aligning themselves with EU legislation in a big way. So far as we are aware, aromatherapy is still licensed practitioner only in the EU. If it was also in US then there is an argument for rolling it out to the whole of Europe. There are already signs that harmonisation of professional qualifications for CAM therapies is under serious discussion in EU. We have a privileged position in UK not supported elsewhere in EU so we do need to be careful to protect it.
These proposals in the US are seen as a serious threat to freedom of choice in healthcare with apparently one third of Americans using CAM therapies including aromatherapy. This is very much the same position that we find ourselves in UK/EU.
There are two issues here - the main one is the international harmonisation of the food supplements regulations along the same lines as the EU supplements directive via CODEX which is about to be ratified by US. People have been lobbying since 2003 as has the food supplements industry in UK & Europe.
The other one is that 'CAM products' are being identified in US, and the FDA 'Guidance' on the regulation of CAM products is that they are not exempt from compliance from the regulations that exist. For example if an aromatherapy massage product meets the FDA definition of a cosmetic in US then it must be labelled as a cosmetic; however if the ingredients are seen to be able to affect the physiological function of the body like antiperspirants and sunscreens then it is on the border line of cosmetics and drugs and regulated as an OTC drug. There is a real fear that materials like essential oils and fixed oils could fall into this category under the new guidance which will regulate products by the way that the consumer may actually use them as opposed to the way that they are labelled. Essential oils are often used for a therapeutic use by consumers although they are not labelled as such.
US has had a rather privileged position in relation to things like food supplements with for example essential oils being added to foods, vitamins, fixed oils etc and regarded as food supplements. All this is about to change and the implications are made clear in the 'Good Life' letter set out below. There is a fear that the US is adopting the same heavy handed approach to regulation as in the EU and that it is seen as draconian over-regulation. A view shared by many CAM organisations in UK and seen as a threat to CAM in general.
There is a world-wide trend to harmonise regulations related to public health and safety and consumer protection; UN is harmonising the transportation of dangerous goods, WHO is harmonising food supplements and pharmaceuticals, REACH will have international implications and may well result in further harmonisation and now FDA appears to be harmonising the regulations for products used in CAM therapies. All of these harmonisation processes have used the EU regulations as a model rather than the US position which has been seen to be rather more relaxed in many cases.
Members who export to US should be aware that the regulatory classification of aromatherapy products may change as a result of the FDA guidance. ATC will continue to monitor the progress of this 'guidance'.
We have also received The Good Life Letter as set out below, which basically sets out what really could happen, see www.goodlifeletter.co.uk and we urge you to sign the petition within the Cropwatch email and any other you may access AS A MATTER OF PRIORITY. My apologies for the delay in sending out this information but we did not receive it until 21 April (23rd in the office!) and have been evaluating it prior to circulation. Another web site of interest is http://www.HealthFreedomUSA.org click on the link that says "Take Action Now!" (http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/organizationsORG/healthfreedomusa/campaign.jsp?campaign_KEY=7185).
Kind regards.
Sylvia M Baker, Administrator & Ray Gransby, Technical Director
Aromatherapy Trade Council
----- Original Message -----
From: Cropwatch
Sent: Saturday, April 21, 2007 6:55 PM
Subject: Re: Comments on FDA Guidance for CAM Products and Regulation
Hi all,
So what's the consensus opinion on this? Will it apply to licensed practitioners? I tracked down the FDA Guidance Draft (which is attached) & the way I read it, it will potentially affect both fixed & essential oils used in aromatherapy massage.
If we agree this is correct, then we all need to act quickly.
Since supporters in the US have put in so much effort to help Cropwatch out fighting EU regulatory issues, now might be an opportunity to return the favour.
We are at your disposal - but we need a plan!
Tony Burfield.
Subject: Comments on FDA Guidance for CAM Products and Regulation
There is a crisis in health freedom. On April 30, 2007 the FDA will close the public comment period on a "Guidance" which will classify every alternative practice as medicine so that only licensed physicians can carry out the procedure AND vitamins, minerals, herbs, etc., will suddenly become "untested drugs" which will be forbidden.
Bad? Real Bad! But public outcry can stop this assault on your health and your freedom.
Spread the word! Tell everyone in your Circle of Influence, professionals, alternative practitioners, nutrient and herb companies, everyone! Let them know how important their participation is to make sure the FDA backs off from this repressive course.
Please share this link with them and urge them to take action: http://tinyurl.com/2u7ghc
Yours in health and freedom,
Rima E. Laibow, MD
Medical Director
Natural Solutions Foundation
www.HealthFreedomUSA.org
Take action now at http://www.democracyinaction.org/healthfreedomusa/campaign.jsp?campaign_KEY=7185&t=
The Good Life Letter
20th April 2007
Imagine a world where natural herbs and supplements are OUTLAWED.
Where natural vegetable juice is classed as a DRUG.
Where health food stores are stripped of all their products and banned from selling anything stronger than a cup of water.
Where naturopaths are FORBIDDEN to practise their craft... imprisoned or fined when they try to pass on their knowledge...
Where people with cancer, heart disease and Alzheimer's aren't allowed to seek out alternative remedies to ease their pain... where they aren't deemed responsible or intelligent enough to look for their solutions to their disease... however slight the chance of a cure.
Where books that promote natural remedies are bulldozed into large piles and burned.
Have I been watching too much Sci-fi on late night telly again?
Okay, I realise this all sounds very Blade Runner. But stay with me on this one...
This is a scenario that really COULD happen. And soon. The seeds are already being sown. We just need to take a look across the Atlantic.
Yes, in the good old USA, some nasty things are afoot.
Believe me, this is something you WON'T be reading about in your newspaper. But in my world it's front page news.
And I reckon you're going to be just as horrified as I am...
In 10 days this new law could destroy hope for millions
In the USA, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is launching a quiet attack on natural medicines... and all who practise, preach and supply information about it.
A new FDA "guidance" document has revealed plans to reclassify all vitamins, supplements, herbs - and even vegetable juices - as FDA-regulated drugs.
Massage oils and massage rocks will be classified as 'medical devices' and will require FDA approval before anyone can use them.
The document is called Docket No. 2006D-0480, "Draft Guidance for Industry on Complementary and Alternative Medicine Products and Their Regulation by the Food and Drug Administration."
It's outrageous...
It means that the mega-corporations who run America are so frightened of the rise of alternative therapies, they want to stamp them out altogether.
This is the 'Big Push' for greedy drug companies
Basically, it's an all-out attack on personal freedoms by greedy corporations. A last-ditch attempt to save the conventional medical industry from a huge shift towards natural medicine.
According to Mike Adams of The Organics Consumer Association:
If the FDA gets its way, the United States will become a medical wasteland, dominated by corporate drug company interests, where the naturopaths are imprisoned and their products destroyed."
Supplements and herbs will become contraband, and gardeners who grow their own medicinal herbs may be raided and arrested by DEA agents wielding assault rifles.
Simply selling dried broccoli sprouts as being "good anti-cancer foods" may land you in prison, and running a vitamin shop could result in you being arrested for "practicing medicine."
This will be the situation in the future...
FDA "experts" (the same guys who re-approved Vioxx after it killed over 50,000 Americans) will decide whether herbs, supplements, vitamins or simple devices like massage stones are to be regulated as drugs and medical devices.
Of course, this is a horrifying proposal.
So rather than spark a proper national debate, it seems that the FDA and its cronies tried to sneak this under the radar... keeping it rather 'schtum'.
Now word has got out and the natural health community is up in arms.
Not sure what good that will do in against the might of big business...
But the FDA is allowing public comments on this until an April 30th deadline. This means that people can petition, argue, and so forth.
Here's one of the petitions.
www.democracyinaction.org
The problem is, they've got 10 days and just an internet petition to arm themselves with.
'David vs. Goliath' springs to mind.
Let's just say, I'm not hopeful.
Why this matters to you and me
You're probably thinking that this is all happening in the United States, so it means we're safe here in the UK and Europe.
Well, no.
What happens in the USA invariably drifts across the water within the decade. The same big businesses hold sway over our government.
And the same attacks are ALREADY happening.
If you recall, last May, a letter was published in The Times slamming Homoeopathy and other complementary therapies as "bogus" medicine.
The letter, organised by Michael Baum, was sent to 467 acute and primary care trusts across the UK.
Sue Croft, Director of Consumers for Health Choice (CHC said:
The group of doctors are entrenched in the old philosophy that curing disease with drugs is the way to good health.
This one-size-fits-all approach is wrong and doesn't work. It completely disregards the fact that we are all individuals with different anatomy and physiology, as well as mental attitude and lifestyle.
The doctors say there is no proof that homoeopathy or even acupuncture works (though it has been used for thousands of years). But lack of evidence today should not be a barrier for the future. If these alternative treatments are taken away - or blocked by just financial considerations, we will never really know what they are capable of.
I couldn't agree more!
It's up to us to fight for our freedom
You and I are of a similar mind. We are open to ancient healing techniques and the power of foods and natural medicines to help us fight disease.
We don't think conventional medicine is bad. Neither do we want to ban it, as the FDA want to ban non-corporate alternative health treatments,
We simply think we have a right to look for ways to supplement conventional medicine with alternatives.
It's our right to choose. It's our planet. It's our food. It's our plant-life, vitamins and minerals.
It NOT the government's...
It's NOT the corporation's.
It's OURS.
I'll be keeping an eye open for all the latest developments as they happen. And if a petition comes to the UK, believe me, I'll pass it round.
If you're interested in finding out more, check out the Consumers for Choice website here:
-------------------------------------------------------
1.Public Comment Period Extended: Natural Solutions Foundation's formal request for an extension for Public Comments was turned down BUT then the FDA did extend the comment period to May 29, 2007!
2.Natural Solutions Foundation website, wwwHealthFreedomUSA.org, was attacked -- again-- but is now up and running.
3.We have time to get at millions of comments in to the FDA! If every person who submitted comments (or tried to) can motivate just ten people to do the same, we would have, by today's count, 3.7 million pro-health freedom comments in to the FDA by the end of May!
4.155,905 people have successfully submitted their comments through our site which is, as far as we know, the ONLY way to send comments to the FDA which will be received at this time. Use the "Take Action Now!" link on our home page, www.HealthFreedomUSA.org.
5.220,154 people have tried to submit comments through our site and were unable to. If you are one of them, go back and try again, please.
6.Dr. Ron Paul, (R, TX) who is running for President, has announced that he will be submitting his comments on the FDA CAM Guidance indicating his belief that this is a serious issue.
7.Our data entry staff are working hard to make sure your comments are submitted if you are using Plan B (send an email to dr.laibow@gmail.com with "submit" as the subject and your name and address in the body. REMEMBER to included your address or we cannot submit for you).
8.Our supporters list has increased by nine times since we blew the whistle on the FDA's dangerous CAM (Complementary and Alternative Modalities) Guidance and its unfounded extention of what US law says -- we are ringing a bell people can hear!
9.The battle rages: we have ignited a firestorm and people are weighing in on whether we should be worried about the CAM Guidance (we most certainly should) or whether we can trust the FDA to a. tell the truth and b. protect natural health over pharmaceutical intersts. If you are on the "b." side, you do not know the history of the FDA and natural health and you also might be interested in the Brooklyn Bridge which I understand is for sale!
10.General Stubblebine and I are at the Ottawa, Canada, meeting Codex Committee on Food Labeling (CCFL). We have submitted formal comments to the FDA and Codex Office of the US Government. I will post these comments and daily reports on the CCFL proceedings on my blo. Click on our website and then go to the "Blog" tab at the top of the page. Organic Standards, Genetically Modified Food Labeling and the right to share information about health benefits of foods and not have that action be considered "advertising" are on the docket. The Natural Solutions Foundation will be there and will keep you posted.
Help Us Stop Codex!
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----- Original Message -----
From: Alliance for Natural Health
Sent: Wednesday, May 02, 2007 3:20 PM
Subject: CAM THERAPIES IN THE USA IN TURMOIL FOLLOWING RELEASE OF FDA DRAFT GUIDANCE DOCUMENT
Dear ,
CAM THERAPIES IN THE USA IN TURMOIL FOLLOWING RELEASE OF FDA DRAFT GUIDANCE DOCUMENT.
By the Alliance for Natural Health (ANH).
Please forward widely to your contacts.
What’s all the fuss about?
In December 2006 the FDA finalised a draft guidance document (Docket No. 2006D-0480] entitled “Draft Guidance for Industry on Complementary and Alternative Medicine Products and Their Regulation by the Food and Drug Administration”. The document seeks to provide “industry” – practitioners and suppliers of products – the FDA’s current thinking on the relationship between existing laws and the practice of ‘complementary and alternative medicine’ (CAM).
The document has generated everything from internet hysteria, much of it triggered by a misinformed take circulated in early April by the Natural Solutions Foundation through to a non-plussed ‘this guidance document changes nothing’ approach, which is keeping the heads of others firmly planted in the sand.
Among all the hype, the ANH’s US-based affiliates, the American Association for Health Freedom and the Health Freedom Foundation, issued a statement on the draft guidance document on April 19. Click here to read the full statement. You’ll notice that the AAHF uses none of the ‘it’s all over tomorrow’ language, yet hints at some real concerns over the FDA’s guidance. Once the AAHF’s lawyers have completed their full assessment of the document, we’ll be hearing more from them. The AAHF should also be commended for being successful in their appeal for an extension to the submission date for comments. Another take came from the National Health Federation in the US, for which Dr Rob Verkerk from the ANH acts as a scientific advisor, particularly on Codex matters. Lee Bechtel, the NHF’s lobbyist, provided a detailed account of the Guidance, stressing the fact that it has no legal sway at all. You can read Lee’s views on the NHF website in his release entitled Much Ado About Nothing (27 April 2007).
When you spend as much time as we do in the ANH looking at legislatures around the world, and looking at trends within those legislatures, patterns become apparent. It is the pattern that is apparent within the FDA’s CAM Guidance that we find to be of greatest concern. Clearly, the Guidance has no direct legal impact in itself and does not allude to any specific changes, but it certainly points towards the often-feared, full implementation of the Dietary Supplement Health & Education Act [DSHEA] – as well as more liberal use of the Public Health Service (PHS) Act.
Since 1994, a large number of American natural health suppliers, and many thousands of ‘practitioners’ that have relied on use of natural products for healthcare purposes, have lived in the belief that the framework DSHEA would allow them to continue using therapeutic natural products for ever and a day. This actually has never been true, as DSHEA, since its passage in 1994, has always contained language that could make this legislation a lot more onerous than it is perceived to be. The FDA’s post-market oversight authority alone, together with its intentions relating to quality and purity (Good Manufacturing Practice) of products, could have been anticipated at the outset to pose significant challenges to many sectors of the natural products industry.
Dietary supplement or drug?
One of the most worrying aspects of the FDA’s Guidance is the fact that it regularly refers to the possibility of licensed drugs being prescribed by practitioners. In essence , it indicates that products used in CAM practice might be categorised as foods or drugs. It does this in the context where the vast majority of natural products used in alternative medicine are in fact dietary supplements, not drugs!
A key criterion that turns a product that might readily be taken to be a food (which includes dietary supplements as classified by DSHEA) into a drug, is its intended use. Let’s remind ourselves of the definition of drug, under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic (FFDC) Act: “articles intended for use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease in man or other animals”
The FDA Guidance speaks in plain language. We all know just how healthy raw vegetable juices are, but we also aware that when a practitioner deals with a cancer patient, the practitioner is very likely to want them to recommend raw vegetable and fruit juices as part of the recommendations offered. This could get them into a lot of trouble, as suggested by the following quote directly from the Guidance (page 2):
“If the juice therapy is intended for use as part of a disease treatment regimen instead of for the general wellness, the vegetable juice would also be subject to regulation as a drug under the Act.”
It’s hard to think only of ‘general wellness’ when someone is dying of cancer. A good practitioner tends to be thinking much more about: how do I modulate the immune system? How do I increase serum antioxidant levels? How do I help the patient re-establish effective self-healing mechanisms in the body….
In short, although it might be easy for products in the retail sector to stick within the structure/function claim constraints of DSHEA, the most difficult thing for any CAM practitioner is the context in which he or she practices. The FDA has the legal power to say that any practitioner who is seeing patients or clients with serious diseases, and are then providing recommendations, is effectively providing products which are “intended for” the “mitigation, treatment or prevention of disease”. If this were to be the interpretation, any use of dietary supplements by practitioners could be considered illegal. This is at least as worrying as some of the developments and legal and regulatory interpretations going on in Europe, with which we are very familiar.
There is however a more hopeful interpretation given on page 12 of the Guidance, where the example of cranberry for urinary tract infections is explored. Fortunately the Guidance implies that the context of the practitioner-patient is probably not sufficient to constitute “intention for disease treatment”, which would otherwise make cranberry products drugs. The Guidance proffers that it is the label claim that is the deciding factor. If you stick within the area of structure/function claims and state on the label “maintains the health of the urinary tract” your product will still remain a dietary supplement. However, should your product carry a claim like “prevent urinary tract infections” you will then have ventured into drug territory.
However, this interpretation in the Guidance could perhaps be seen as nothing more than a temporary fix. Wait until Codex has followed the European Union on its path towards limited health claims based on “generally accepted evidence” – and the range of claims that might be allowed could reduce dramatically. How can this system ever allow for claims for emerging science? How can you ever have an innovative product that is then not forced into a drugs regime? Some might refer to this as a key part of the game plan for a regulatory ‘stitch up’ for natural products.
FDA Guidance pushes CAM towards 'drug’ classification
Although there’s nothing new in the Guidance in terms of legislation, it is worth remembering that DSHEA has never been fully implemented. It’s also worth reminding ourselves that DSHEA always set out to give the FDA powers to jump on any product that they deem to pose an “unreasonable or significant risk of illness or injury.” None of us have any problem with this in principle – we only have a problem if they use flawed science or evidence to construct a case which incorrectly classifies a product or treatment as unsafe.
Now this is where you really need to take stock – and see what’s going on outside the US, with full support from the FDA officials that populate the US delegation in the Codex Committee on Nutrition and Special Dietary Uses. This Committee is presently engaged in ‘copy-catting’ a flawed system of risk assessment being developed by the EU that says that the safe maximum (supplement) level of vitamin C might be just 1000 mg, or 10 mg of vitamin B6. It’s no better for other vitamins – the overall approach is flawed – and this is something the ANH has been working at exposing for several years.
But these ‘upper levels’ – once rubber stamped by Codex, and the FDA delegation that is party to it, will act as the internationally agreed borderline as to what is considered safe as a food – or a dietary supplement. These ‘upper safe levels’, we are told, have been agreed by international, qualified experts, most of which have strong ties, it seems, with the drugs companies. It’s therefore not at all difficult for a regulator to make the case that dietary supplements marketed at doses above this internationally agreed borderline are unsafe!
With this knowledge, read the following paragraph in the FDA’s latest Guidance (page 7; taken from Section 201 of the FFDC Act, of which DSHEA is part) which defines the category of “new drug” and see what you think:
“Any drug…the composition of which is such that the drug is not generally recognized, among experts qualified by scientific training and experience to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of drugs, as safe and effective for use under the conditions prescribed, recommended, or suggested in the labeling thereof…”
It’s always a particular worry when you are reliant on those that are “experts qualified by scientific training and experience to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of drugs.” These so-called experts have traditionally been some of the biggest enemies of natural healthcare! They tend not to be keen on seeing people getting better through the use of unpatented natural products. It goes without saying that the biggest problem with a drug or new drug classification is the costs involved to meet the very substantial clinical investigations required to prove safety and efficacy. This is simply prohibitive to any but the very largest companies. It’s obviously core business for the drug companies.
DSHEA vs the Public Health Service Act
While all eyes have been focused on DSHEA and the FFDC Act, the Guidance reminds us of the importance of the Public Health Service (PHS) Act. It emphasises that Section 351(a)(1) of the PHS Act firmly includes “biological products” under its remit, and this classification might easily sweep up a diverse range of products including probiotics, hormonal/glandular products and animal-based Ayurvedic and other traditional medicinal products. Again, we must recognise that the FDA has the legal firepower to make such classifications, and the Guidance even states that probiotics could “conceivably” be classified as “biological products” under the PHS Act. Should this happen – all such products would require licensing – more money, more studies, more red tape, more prohibition for the majority of suppliers. The FDA reminds us of its powers when it tells us: “the PHS Act gives us the authority to establish requirements for the approval, suspension, and revocation of biological product licenses.” [See pages 1 and 13 from the Guidance, in particular].
Totality of US legislative powers
There is no doubt that the Guidance provides further evidence that the FDA is intent on tightening the regulatory burden for companies, by bringing in fuller implementation of existing laws, through the FFDC and PHS Acts. There is support for this in Congress, with Kennedy’s Food & Drug Administration Revitalization Act (S1082) being the latest example.
In the meantime, lets add to this the additional powers already conferred to the FDA through the Trilateral Cooperation Charter (TCC) whereby the USA, Canada and Mexico have agreed to cooperate in order “to increase communication, collaboration, and the exchange of information among the three countries in the areas of drugs, biologics, medical devices, food safety and nutrition to protect and promote human health”.
The most worrying aspect of the TCC is the way in which the three counties have agreed to define ‘health fraud’. In essence, they have provided such a wide definition of health fraud that it potentially allows the regulators in each of the three countries to go after any company making therapeutic natural health products – even if they present no harm to consumers and contain no false or misleading information on their labels or associated marketing material. In fact the FDA claims over 730 prosecutions since the TCC’s inception in 2003 through to just October 2005.
The TCC defines health fraud as follows, but note in particular the second part of the definition we have bolded for emphasis:
“The false, deceptive, or misleading promotion, advertisement, distribution, sale, possession for sale, or offering for sale of products or provision of services, intended for human use, that are represented as being safe and/or effective to diagnose, prevent, cure, treat, or mitigate disease (or other conditions), to rehabilitate patients or to provide a beneficial effect on health.”
Suddenly – any product that is both safe and gives rise to beneficial effects on health i.e. the vast majority of dietary supplements, become potential subjects of health fraud. Is the development of a new regional trading block in North America, for which the TCC provides a taster, going to be the beginning of the slippery slope towards global harmonization, led by Europe, enacted through the Codex Alimentarius Commission, and policed by the World Trade Organization? It looks like it.
Parallels with Europe
European citizens have seen over the last decade a remarkably rapid transfer of power from sovereign states to unelected officials within the European Commission. A democratically elected European Parliament exists, but has very limited powers and it is regularly overruled by the European Commission. We have seen the introduction of the EU Food Supplements Directive in 2002, the first part of a framework which aims to harmonise food supplement laws across all 27 EU Member States. The ANH has challenged the first part of this law and, nearly two years after the case was ruled on in the European Court of Justice, we are beginning to see results. This progress has occurred following the submission of test dossiers for a wide range of vitamin and mineral ingredients in February/March 2007.
But the real snake pit for dietary supplements in Europe is the Human Medicinal Products Directive. This is where all products that don’t make it into the Food Supplements Directive fall. Just like the definitions of a ‘drug’, ‘new drug’ and ‘health fraud’ in the USA, the definition of a drug in this EU Directive is unbelievably wide. In fact it makes water a drug. On top of this, the most recent amendment of this Directive (2004) has broadened its scope to the extent where this Directive has supremacy over any other Directive, should any product meet the definitions within this Directive as well as any other. All food supplements so happen to fit the definition of both the Human Medicinal Products Directive and the Food Supplements Directive.
This type of supremacy for drug laws seems to be a central part of the international 'game plan'. The plan appears to be about limiting the scope of laws maintaining natural health products as foods, increasing the scope of drug laws – and simultaneously – giving more and more power to medicine regulators, who we know, worldwide, tend to work very closely with their friends in the pharma companies. Codex provides the framework to control a limited range of substances as foods, which will automatically exclude any foods that happen to be therapeutic in nature, while everything else falls within the scope of drug laws. Here, only the the pharmas have sufficiently deep pockets to play ball. You see, the natural health stitch-up is complete. Unless of course we all complain like we've never complained before....
Telling the FDA what you think
The FDA want to have comments on their Guidance. These will be best delivered through associations, clinics and other representative bodies, rather than by individual consumers. This is because this is Guidance for industry – so it is industry that will be listened to most.
Owing to appeals by our affiliates, the American Association for Health Freedom and Health Freedom Foundation, as well as by National Health Freedom Action and others, we had been led to believe that the the deadline for public comment had been extended from Monday, April 30 to Tuesday, May 29 2007.
[Urgent Update: There is now conflicting information regarding this extension, with the FDA claiming 'employee error' and stating that Monday, April 30 stands. The American Association for Health Freedom and Health Freedom Foundation continue to lobby Congress on this issue - watch this space!]
Submit written comments on the draft guidance to the Division of Dockets Management (HFA-305), Food and Drug Administration, 5630 Fishers Lane, rm. 1061, Rockville, MD 20852.
Electronic comments should be submitted to: http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/leaving.cgi?from=leavingFR.html&log=linklog&to=http://www.fda.gov/dockets/ecomments.
The Guidance and comments already submitted can be viewed at: http://www.fda.gov/ohrms/dockets/dockets/06d0480/06d0480.htm
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Fight for Your Health: Exposing the FDA’s Betrayal of America.
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