Guest guest Posted January 13, 2005 Report Share Posted January 13, 2005 Health through education, for a much misguided nation. --- " Citizens for Health " <info Wed, 12 Jan 2005 21:23:02 -0500 " William Burgess " <bigbird3969 Please forward this letter so we can set the record straight about dietary supplements! Dear William, Thank you for taking a stand against inacurate media statements about dietary supplements. Your action will make a difference Please forward this letter to everyone you can. The media has increased its negative-to-positive ratio on dietary supplement stories from 2-1 in 1998 to 7-1 in 2002. This negative spin is keeping many consumers from using products to benefit their health - and their health bottom line. A recent study showed that by taking a few simple supplements, like calcium, we could reduce the health care costs in this country by $15 billion. (www.supplementinfo.org) This is just one study looking at five products. Imagine the difference natural health approaches could make to enhancing quality of life and simultaneously reducing costs. But this will be impossible if we allow the media to continue to state untrue and disparaging information. Take Action Today. It's easy and takes 30 seconds. Just click here to sign on to our response to Self Magazine's recent article stating that dietary supplements are unregulated and lack evidence of effectiveness for mood boosting! Thousands of articles state as fact that " dietary supplements are unregulated " and lack evidence for effectiveness. This is simply untrue. For too long, these statements have gone unchecked. Now Citizens for Health is setting up a new program to monitor the media for misinformation and to have you, the media consumer, express your desire for fact-based and balanced reporting. Together concerned consumers can put a stop to the constant and inappropriate media disparagement of beneficial products used safely by tens of millions of consumers. Send an endorsement or our letter, or write your own letter to Self Magazine. Just visit the link below! To Sign on to our Letter: http://www.healthactioncenter.com/action/index.asp?step=2 & item=23428 To Write and Send your own Letter: http://www.healthactioncenter.com/action/index.asp?step=2 & item=23448 In Health, Ana Micka President/CEO Citizens for Health P.S. These publications will respond to our input because we are their readers and they even rely on dietary supplement advertising to operate. If we start making our voices heard and politely and regularly asking them to correct mis-stated facts about the products we rely on for our health, we can start to bring about a more positive image for a natural health approach. Send the letter now! Please forward this letter so we can set the record straight about dietary supplements! Your message below was sent to: Editors of Self Magazine Self Magazine Editors of Self Magazine Self Magazine Self Magazine Editors of Self Magazine I endorse the following letter responding to your recent article incorrectly stating that herbs are not regulated and there is limited evidence for theif effectiveness as mood boosters. Please print this letter and present a more balanced view in the future. Thank you for your consideration. Please print the following letter: In your December 2004 issue you have an article about taking herbal mood boosters ('happiness q & a'). Writer Catherine Birndorf, MD, dismisses herbs by saying, " their quality isn't regulated " and " there's far less evidence that herbal remedies are effective " compared with prescription drugs. This is after she admits that " St. John's wort has been found to ease mild to moderate depression. " So there is apparently enough evidence for her to make this statement, but somehow the herb still doesn't meet her standards. That is not logical. Either it's effective or it's not effective. You can't have it both ways. Other countries have medical monographs for herbs, where St. John's wort (Hypericum perforatum L.) has been judged as being as effective as drug therapy for mild depression, with fewer side effects. Between October 1991 and December 1999, over 8 million patients were treated with St. John's wort in Germany with only 95 reports of side effects. Yes, it may interact with some drugs, but so do some foods as well as other drugs. And the interaction between drugs is often far more dangerous, judging by the statistics. Drugs are strictly regulated precisely because of their dangers, from side effects to deaths. By comparison the dangers and side effects of most herbs and vitamins are tiny. According to a leading medical journal there are well over 100,000 deaths a year among people taking drugs, as directed. Adding in all medical and drug errors brings the yearly death toll to over 700,000 by some estimates, over a million by others. The proven death rate from all dietary supplements is less than ten per average year, according to the American Association of Poison Control Centers. By this measure, dietary supplements are far safer than eating a meal, whereas drugs are many times more dangerous! Dr. Birndorf also states that the quality of herbal remedies isn't regulated. That is complete and utter nonsense, as the FDA is quick to point out: " The dietary supplement manufacturer is responsible for ensuring that a dietary supplement is safe before it is marketed. FDA is responsible for taking action against any unsafe dietary supplement product after it reaches the market. FDA's post-marketing responsibilities include monitoring safety, e.g. voluntary dietary supplement adverse event reporting, and product information, such as labeling, claims, package inserts, and accompanying literature. In the case of some new dietary ingredients, a pre-market safety notification to FDA is required by law. The agency will continue its ongoing efforts of monitoring and evaluating product safety, ingredient safety, and product labeling, as well as ensuring product quality. " While I enthusiastically endorse the doctor's statement that consumers should always let their health care professional know about which supplements they are using, as well as her mention of certain herbs as being effective, I strongly dispute her general characterization of herbs as being unregulated or lacking good evidence of their effectiveness. That is an all-too-common view among medical professionals, who think, " if it ain't a drug, it won't fix it " . Both ginkgo biloba and St. John's wort have collected enough clinical evidence to convince many medical professionals all over the world. Their potential side effects are mild compared to what you would expect from drugs, and it's legitimate to want to try these before getting hooked on prescription drugs for a lifetime, with their potentially far more deadly risks. Neil E. Levin, CCN, DANLA Nutrition Educator Now Foods Bloomingdale, IL 630-545-9098 ext. 217 nlevin REFERENCES: 1. The ABC Clinical Guide to Herbs © 2002 by the American Botanical Council (ABC). 2. European Pharmacopoeia (Ph.Eur., 2001). 3. Blumenthal M, Busse WR, Goldberg A, Gruenwald J, Hall T, Riggins CW, Rister RS, editors. Klein S, Rister RS (trans.). The Complete German Commission E Monographs-Therapeutic Guide to Herbal Medicines. Austin (TX): American Botanical Council; Boston (MA): Integrative Medicine Communication; 1998. 4. Wheatley D. LI 160, an extract of St. John's wort, versus amitriptyline in mildly to moderately depressed outpatients-a controlled 6 week clinical trial. Pharmacopsychiatry 1997; 30(suppl.):77-80. 5. Woelk H. Comparison of St. John's wort and imipramine for treating depression: randomized controlled trial. BMJ 2000 Sep;321:536-9. 6. A total of 11 studies have compared SJW preparations with conventional antidepressants (7 tricyclic; 4 SSRI) concluding that SJW is effective for mild to moderate depression with a low side effect profile (Kasper, 2001). (Herbalgram) Kasper S. Hypericum perforatum- Review of clinical studies. Pharmacopsychiatry 2001;34 Suppl. 1:S51-5. 7. In a review of 40 clinical studies conducted through 1991 on the use of ginkgo for symptoms associated with cerebral insufficiency, eight of the 40 studies met inclusion criteria for a well-designed study (Kleijnen and Knipschild, 1992). All but one (Hartmann and Frick, 1991) of these eight studies concluded that ginkgo extract was as effective as co-dergocrine and superior to placebo. (Herbalgram) Kleijnen J, Knipschild P. Ginkgo biloba for cerebral insufficiency. Br J Clin Pharmac 1992;34:352-8. 8. Meta analysis: All relevant, unconfounded, randomized, double-blind controlled studies, in which extracts of Ginkgo biloba at any strength and over any period were compared with placebo for their effects on people with acquired cognitive impairment, including dementia, of any degree of severity. Ginkgo biloba appears to be safe in use with no excess side effects compared with placebo. Overall there is promising evidence of improvement in cognition and function associated with Ginkgo. Birks J, Grimley Evans J. Ginkgo Biloba for cognitive impairment and dementia (Cochrane Review). In: The Cochrane Library, Issue 4, 2004.Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. 9. WATSON ET AL ¦ 2003 AAPCC ANNUAL REPORT The American Journal of Emergency Medicine (22(5):335-404, 2004) 10. (Average 1982-1998): According to Canadian researchers, approximately 32,000 hospitalized patients (and possibly as many as 106,000) in the USA die each year because of adverse reactions to their prescribed medications. Source: Lazarou, J, Pomeranz, BH, Corey, PN, " Incidence of adverse drug reactions in hospitalized patients: a meta-analysis of prospective studies, " Journal of the American Medical Association (Chicago, IL: American Medical Association, 1998), 1998;279:1200-1205, also letters column, " Adverse Drug Reactions in Hospitalized Patients, " JAMA (Chicago, IL: AMA, 1998), Nov. 25, 1998, Vol. 280, No. 20, from the web at http://jama.ama-assn.org/issues/v280n20/ffull/jlt1125-1.html, last accessed Feb. 12, 2001. Sincerely, William Burgess 2515 Detroit St Portsmouth, VA 23707-1723 USA bigbird3969 ___________ Switch to Netscape Internet Service. 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