scarlettrose wrote:Newberry, I totally agree that alt. therapies should be held to the same standard. At the same time, I don't think they should be necessarily pulled off the market if they are found *lacking*.
Because most of these therapies have their share of loyal devotees due to their own personal experience, many of whom would probably not care what the science said. As for everyone else, it would be up to them to make up their mind based on the information made available.
If they are not found to be dangerous then I don't think there is reason to pull them off the market.
I agree; I see no reason for taking safe drugs or supplements off the market. I do feel that drug and supplement makers should not be able to make unproven claims about their products. I'm against the
DSHEA act; I think supplements should be regulated; not just drugs.
eta: from a review of a
book critical of both the FDA and the supplement industry:
Hurley maintains that the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994 is one of the worst laws on the books. Shielding vitamins and herbal concoctions from FDA testing, it requires only that no curative claims be made for such "dietary supplements." In the prologue, Hurley shows that curative claims are made, anyway, and the users of an herbal salve were able to sue when the stuff ate their flesh. Subsequent chapters cite cases that also show that per-dosage amounts of dietary-supplement ingredients are often improperly listed; that greater than standard recommended daily amounts of most vitamins wreak havoc in the body; and that natural doesn't mean safe or effective. He notes the high proportion of convicted felons in the supplement industry, sketching the careers of several of the most egregious, including best-selling self-help health author Kevin Trudeau. He points to research that nullifies common knowledge about the effectiveness of virtually all dietary supplements; food, not pills, is the optimal and probably the only means of properly ingesting vitamins, minerals, enzymes, and so forth. He puts all such substantive information in the context of plenty of absorbing and moving stories of death, deceit, and political chicanery. Truly a good book that is good for you. Ray Olson
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Again, I'm well aware of drug companies having too much influence, and sometimes tainting studies. I'm saying that we need to regulate and be skeptical of Western medicine and drug companies as well as alternative therapies and the supplement industry. Not have a double standard.