Guest guest Posted October 29, 2005 Report Share Posted October 29, 2005 " Zeus " <info EU Directives - from Alliance for Natural Health website Sat, 29 Oct 2005 19:27:16 +0100 http://www.alliance-natural-health.org/index.cfm?action=content.eu.Default Traditional Herbal Medicinal Products Directive (Directive 2004/24/EC) This is actually a sub-Directive, rather than a stand alone Directive, being part of the Human Medicinal Products Directive (see ANH Information Sheet, Ref IS 3/05). It is intended only for those herbal products that are considered as " medicinal " and which have a history of traditional use. It comes in to force in EU Member States on 30 October 2005, although provides a transition period up to 2011 before it is fully implemented. Products regulated by this Directive benefit from a fast-track `drugs licensing regime' where the need to supply costly safety studies can be avoided if it can be demonstrated that the product in question has been used safely over a continuous period of 30 years, of which 15 are in at least one EU Member State. How will it affect practitioners, consumers and manufacturers? 1. The Directive is only relevant for herbal products targeting minor ailments. The Directive applies to herbal medicines for minor ailments only which " are intended and designed for use without the supervision of a medical practitioner for diagnostic purposes or for prescription or monitoring of treatment. " 2. Exclusion of some products from non-EU traditional cultures. The so-called `30-year-rule' will restrict the availability of all products from non-EU cultures which have yet to be used in the European Union, or have been introduced within only the last 15 years. Such products could only be permitted if they were able to successfully pass through a full drugs licensing regime, likely to be prohibitively expensive for most non-pharmaceutical manufacturers or suppliers. 3. Food supplements might be categorised as herbal medicinal products. There is a significant risk that herbal products in some Member States which should rightly be considered as food supplements, will be considered by competent authorities as " herbal medicinal products " .If they then do not qualify for the fast-track under this Directive, they will again require a full drugs license if they are to be sold. 4. Particular combinations of herbal products may be disallowed. The traditional use must be for an individual herb or specific combination of herbs, thus preventing use of new or innovative combinations that might be supported by emerging science. 5. Herbal products containing significant levels of nutrients will be prohibited. Combinations with vitamins and minerals will only be allowed if the action of the nutrients is considered " ancillary " to that of the herbal ingredients. 6. Products will be subject to pharmaceutical stability tests. It will be necessary for manufacturers to demonstrate 6-months stability of mixtures, which will be difficult or impossible for many complex tinctures which have been used safely and with demonstrated benefit in specific medicinal cultures (e.g. Ayurveda). 7. Increased cost to consumer. Significant compliance costs will apply, which will need to be passed on to consumers. This may make their cost uneconomic for some. 8. Committee control. Authorisations will be controlled by the Committee for Herbal Medicinal Products which is weighted strongly towards drug pharmacologists, as opposed to practising medical herbalists. Link to herbal medicines documents on ANH website. Click here to access one-page ANH Information Sheet on the Traditional Herbal Medicinal Products Directive (last update: September 2005). Link to UK Medicines & Healthcare products Regulatory Agency website: traditional medicines registration scheme; guidance and information. _______________ The Human Medicinal Products (Pharmaceuticals) Directive (Directive 2004/27/EC) This is the key Directive (2004/27/EC), sometimes referred to as the `Pharmaceuticals Directive', controlling the use and sale of pharmaceutical products across the EU. It was first enacted in 1965 and has been amended on several occasions, most recently in 2004. This most recent amendment is in the process of being transposed into regulations in the 25 EU Member States. There are two fundamental problems with this Directive as it relates to natural products, and these have already caused some governments in the European Union to consider high dose vitamin C, glucosamine, the amino acid 5HTP and ethylated Omega-3 fish oils as drugs. Problem 1: the definition Firstly, it contains an extremely broad definition of a drug or " medicinal product " (Article 1), so that absolutely any product, even a food or food supplement, which has a physiological effect on the body, can be classified as a drug by regulators. The second (function) limb of the definition states that any substance or combinations of substances " which may be used in or administered to human beings either with a view to restoring, correcting or modifying physiological functions by exerting a pharmacological, immunological or metabolic action, or to making a medical diagnosis " should be classified as a medicinal product. This definition is so broad it technically includes all therapeutic substances, as well as all foods, water, coffee and more or less everything that is consumed by or applied to humans. In an attempt to reduce legal uncertainty, the Directive purportedly provides exclusion for " food, food supplements, medical devices, biocides or cosmetics " , but since this exclusion is contained in a Recital rather than an Article, it has little legal weight, especially as this Recital applies to the amending Directive rather than the base Directive of 1965. Problem 2: the scope The Directive has the ability to `trump' other Directives via its Article 2(2), which states, " In cases of doubt, where, taking into account all its characteristics, a product may fall within the definition of a 'medicinal product' and within the definition of a product covered by other Community legislation the provisions of this Directive shall apply. " Therefore, there is a real risk that leading-edge, practitioner-type food supplements may be classified as medicines, to be controlled by this Directive rather than the Food Supplements Directive. The full drugs regime provided by this Directive is so costly that it would be prohibitive for most food supplement manufacturers. Apart from regulating conventional pharmaceutical products, the Directive also regulates homoeopathic products and traditional herbal medicinal products (see below), allowing specific dispensations over a normal drugs regime for each category. ANH is involved in preparatory work aimed at challenging the legality of this Directive. ANH and the Netherlands-based HAN Foundation are also working to develop a new regulatory framework for food supplements and functional foods which is proportionate as well as being legally and rational scientifically. Link to human medicinal products documents on ANH website. Click here to access one-page ANH Information Sheet on the Human Medicinal Products Directive (last update: September 2005). ____________ The EU Nutrition and Health Claims Regulation (COM(2003) 424 final - 2003/0165 (COD)) The EU Nutrition and Health Claims Regulation (COM(2003) 424 final - 2003/0165 (COD)) will have full control over any and all claims made about a food product. No claims of any sort will be allowed unless they are specifically accepted and approved by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA). The Alliance for Natural Health (ANH) considers that there is a real risk that health claims that can be scientifically proven may nevertheless be rejected since the EFSA may consider that such claims are not based on " generally accepted scientific data " . Once finalised, the Regulation will be immediately effective in all EU Member States and, unlike EU Directives, will not need to be transposed into the regulatory system of national governments. The Regulation may infringe Article 10 of the Convention on Human Rights, which guarantees freedom of speech. It seems that bans in cases where potential claims are accurate, which may result because commercial interests are unable to meet the data requirement provisions for substantiation of health claims, may effectively impede freedom of speech. How will it affect practitioners, consumers and manufacturers? The most serious potential problems for practitioners, consumers and innovative natural product manufacturers and suppliers, that make up the bulk of the ANH support base, are as follows: • Health claims may be rejected even if they are able to be scientifically proven since EFSA may consider that such claims are not based on " generally accepted scientific data " . This is particularly problematic for innovative and emerging science; • The scientific substantiation procedure for health claims, as set out in the proposed regulation, would disproportionately favour large businesses over small businesses; • There can be no rationale in attempting to ban certain categories of health claim that can be scientifically proven (e.g. slimming, behavioural, physiological claims) as per proposed Article 11; • The proposed Regulation could seriously interfere with the ability of complementary health practitioners to properly inform and assist their clients or patients, and; • There are potentially very serious conflicts with existing Community law, most notably the directive on human medicinal products (2004/27/EC). This could prevent any significant claim being made for a food product or nutritional supplement, unless it underwent medicinal licensing, an extremely costly and time consuming process that is not economically feasible for most food or supplement manufacturers. Link to health claims documents on ANH website. Click here to access one-page ANH Information Sheet on the Nutrition and Health Claims Regulation (last update: September 2005). Codex Alimentarius Guidelines on Vitamin and Mineral Food Supplements The Codex Alimentarius Commission was created in 1963 by the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) and World Health Organization (WHO) to develop food standards, guidelines and related texts such as codes of practice under the Joint FAO/WHO Food Standards Programme. The main stated purposes of this Programme are protecting health of the consumers and ensuring fair trade practices in the food trade, and promoting coordination of all food standards work undertaken by international governmental and non-governmental organizations. The Codex Alimentarius Guidelines on Vitamin and Mineral Food Supplements apply only in jurisdictions where vitamin and mineral food supplements are regulated as foods (rather than as medicines). They have been under development for over approximately 10 years, under the auspices of the Germany-based Codex Committee on Nutrition on Foods for Special Dietary Uses (CCNFSDU) which finalised the text in the final step (8) of the Codex procedure in Bonn, Germany, 1-5 November 2004. The Guidelines, amid considerable opposition from consumer groups and natural health campaigners, were finally accepted at the 28th Session of the Codex Alimentarius Commission in Rome on 4 July 2005. One of the most significant aspects of the Guidelines is the setting of maximum daily potencies for vitamin and mineral food supplements after considering upper safe levels (based on `scientific risk assessment', see ANH Information Sheet, Ref 02/05) and dietary intakes from other food sources. These Guidelines are likely to set, amongst other things, an internationally recognized borderline between dosages of vitamins and minerals used as foods and those used as medicines. So-called " scientific risk assessment " approaches have been widely agreed by various government agencies principally in the US and Europe, and are also supported by major trade associations in the natural products area (e.g. the Council for Responsible Nutrition [CRN] and the National Nutritional Foods Association [NNFA] in the USA, and the European Federation of Health Product Manufacturers [EHPM] in Europe). The " scientific risk assessment " approach proposed for Codex guidelines on vitamins and minerals parallels that set out in Article 5 of the Food Supplements Directive, which has formed the template for international Codex guidelines. Unless existing, flawed methods of risk assessment for nutrients, which are derived from those used on toxins such as pharmaceuticals and pesticides, are substituted for scientifically rational risk/benefit analysis, unnecessarily low dosage ceilings will be applied which could restrict very large numbers of people from accessing dosages beneficial to health. Link to Codex documents on ANH website. Click here to access one-page ANH Information Sheet on the Codex Guidelines on Vitamin and Mineral Food Supplements (last update: September 2005). A wide range of health freedom interests in the USA, including the ANH, have united in mid-2005 to form an umbrella organisation, the Coalition for Health Freedom, to help protect US citizens from restrictions on dosages or types of dietary supplement or functional food which may result from international Codex guidelines. For more information, please email info www.alliance-natural-health.org forwarded by Zeus Information Service Alternative Views on Health www.zeusinfoservice.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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