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Mon, 10 Nov 2003 07:05:04 -0500

HSI - Jenny Thompson

Under the Gun

 

Under the Gun

 

Health Sciences Institute e-Alert

 

November 10, 2003

 

**************************************************************

 

Dear Reader,

 

When your back is to the wall, it's good to have options.

 

And we now have an option.

 

In the e-Alert " The Fix Is In " (7/22/03) I told you about the

senate bill (S. 722) designed to broadly expand the FDA's

authority to control the dietary supplement market. If passed,

this bill could seriously inhibit your freedom to make your own

health care decisions.

 

But now a new bill has been introduced in the Senate (S. 1538),

which challenges the need for S. 722, while strengthening the

1994 legislation that was specifically designed to help protect

the supplement industry from unnecessary constraints in the

first place.

 

These two bills are expected be voted on soon, so now is the

time to let our congressmen know that S. 1538 is the voice of

reason in the dietary supplement debate.

 

----------------------------

Unnecessary and overreaching

----------------------------

 

If passed in its current form, S. 722 (titled " Dietary

Supplement Safety Act of 2003 " ) will give the FDA sweeping new

powers.

 

For instance, under S. 722, FDA officials would have the ability

to remove an entire class of supplements from the market in

response to the filing of only one serious adverse reaction

complaint - even if the complaint was filed by someone who used

the supplement in contradiction to the instructions and warnings

of the manufacturer.

 

In such a case, supplement makers would then be required to

demonstrate the safety of their products; a process that would

put a heavy financial burden on accused manufacturers

- heavy enough to drive some out of business. For those

supplements that did reach the evaluation stage, the FDA would

set the standards for the evaluations and then determine if the

standards were met. In effect, the FDA would act as prosecutor,

judge, and jury, while accused manufacturers would be forced to

pay the bill against a stacked deck.

 

The sponsor of S. 722 - Senator Dick Durbin - says his bill will

" save lives and restore America's confidence in the use of

dietary supplements. "

 

First: With dietary supplement sales at an all time high,

American's are displaying a growing confidence in their use of

supplements, not a lack of it. And second: It's simply naïve to

think that additional regulations will save lives when the

current regulations that promise safety for prescription drug

users are powerless to prevent thousands of drug-related deaths

every year.

 

----------------------------

The alternative

----------------------------

 

Think of S. 722 is a staging area from which the FDA will have

the opportunity to dismantle the dietary supplement freedom that

we've enjoyed for almost a decade under the Dietary Supplement

Health and Education Act (DSHEA).

 

In a nutshell, DSHEA classifies and regulates dietary

supplements as food. Under DSHEA, the FDA and the FTC regulate

the manufacturing of supplements, as well as labeling and

advertising. And yet critics of DSHEA would have you believe

that the act doesn't regulate supplements at all. What they're

really saying is that DSHEA doesn't regulate supplements in the

same way that drugs are regulated. In fact, DSHEA has been a

boon for the supplement industry, by not hampering the

manufacture of supplements with unnecessary regulations.

 

This is where the new Senate Bill 1538 comes in. Titled " DSHEA

Full Implementation and Enforcement Act, " S. 1538 was introduced

by senators Tom Harkin and Orrin Hatch to help strengthen DSHEA,

making S. 722 irrelevant.

 

Under S. 1538, the FDA would receive additional funding to

ensure that DSHEA is fully carried out, as originally intended.

The new bill also increases funding for dietary supplement

research and consumer information through the National

Institutes of Health.

 

As many e-Alert readers are aware, I'm no fan of regulations and

I don't believe that the best way to solve problems is to throw

money at them. But I do believe that DSHEA provides more than

enough regulation of dietary supplements. Therefore, S. 1538

offers a reasonable and responsible alternative to the

completely unnecessary extremes of S. 722.

 

----------------------------

Exercise your voice

----------------------------

 

Predicting how and when Congress might act is a longer shot than

predicting the stock market. But it appears that both S. 722 and

S. 1538 may come before the Senate for a vote in the next few

weeks. So the time to act is now. I strongly urge you to join me

in taking a moment to send a brief letter or e-mail to your

Senators. (You can easily find Congressional street addresses

and e-mail addresses at congress.org just by entering your zip

code. We've heard that snail mail gets more attention from our

public servants than e-mail.)

 

Tell your Senators that you strongly support S. 1538 ( " DSHEA

Full Implementation and Enforcement Act " ) which will provide all

the funding necessary to insure consumer protection under DSHEA.

Tell them you hope they'll support S. 1538, while also opposing

S. 722 ( " Dietary Supplement Safety Act of 2003 " ), which will

only limit our freedom to make our own health care choices with

the responsible use of dietary supplements.

 

And please ask your friends and family to help get the word out

about these two important bills. Nothing less than the future of

our health care freedom is at stake.

 

 

**************************************************************

To start receiving your own copy of the HSI e-Alert, visit:

http://www.hsibaltimore.com/ealert/freecopy.html

Or forward this e-mail to a friend so they can sign-up to

receive their own copy of the HSI e-Alert.

 

**************************************************************

 

... and another thing

 

When you think of drug withdrawal, does withdrawal from aspirin

come to mind?

 

Probably not. Aspirin is generally regarded as so benign that

most people would find it hard to imagine that you could

experience withdrawal symptoms by quitting an aspirin regimen.

But in a study presented at a meeting of chest physicians last

month, French researchers showed that severe angina and fatal

heart attacks might be prompted by the sudden halt of regular

aspirin intake.

 

In reviewing more than 1,200 cases of coronary episodes,

researchers found 51 patients who suffered heart attacks or

other severe coronary problems less than one week after they

stopped using aspirin. Not surprisingly, patients with a history

of heart disease were at particularly high risk.

 

Of great concern is the fact that patients preparing for surgery

are regularly advised to discontinue aspirin therapy to avoid

excess bleeding during their operations. The French team told

Reuters news service that doctors should not advise their

coronary patients to stop using aspirin, and even stated that

aspirin therapy " cannot be safely stopped in any case. "

 

Imagine that! You begin taking a daily aspirin to protect your

heart, and once you start, you're hooked! If you stop, you may

have a 1 in 25 chance of prompting a dangerous coronary episode.

That's circular logic in my book.

 

Suddenly, that simple daily aspirin doesn't seem quite so

benign.

 

To Your Good Health,

 

Jenny Thompson

Health Sciences Institute

 

**************************************************************

 

Sources:

" The DSHEA Full Implementation and Enforcement Act " Senate Bill

1538, 108th Congress, 1st Session, thomas.loc.gov

" Dietary Supplement Safety Act of 2003 " Senate Bill 722, 108th

Congress, 1st Session, thomas.loc.gov

" Durbin Moves to Prevent Sale of Dangerous Dietary Supplements

like Ephedra " Dick Durbin Press Release, 3/26/03,

durbin.senate.gov

" FDA Moving to Dismantle DSHEA " Smart Publications, 4/25/03,

smart-publications.com

" An Urgent Call to Action: Your Right to Use Nutritional

Supplements is in Jeopardy " Julian Whitaker, M.D., 7/17/03,

drwhitaker.com

" Don't Let Congress Overturn the Dietary Supplement Health and

Education Act of 1994 " Whole Foods, wholefoods.com

" Before and After DSHEA " Council for Responsible Nutrition,

crnusa.org

" Halting Aspirin Suddenly can Cause Heart Attack " Reuters,

10/29/03, reuters.com

 

Copyright ©1997-2003 by www.hsibaltimore.com, L.L.C.

The e-Alert may not be posted on commercial sites without

written permission.

 

**************************************************************

Before you hit reply to send us a question or request, please

visit here http://www.hsibaltimore.com/ealert/questions.html

 

**************************************************************

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e-Alerts and products or you're an HSI member and would like

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**************************************************************

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