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    Scientists and Media Rip Herbal Remedies

      

    The Herbal Hype of Dietary Supplements
    - AMA News (August 21, 2000)
    Physicians need to educate themselves about supplements used by the elderly, who are taking them in record numbers.

    "These people are snake oil salesmen, and what they're selling is magic," said nutritional researcher Victor Herbert, MD, professor of medicine at Mt. Sinai-New York University Health System, New York City.

    "We can embrace some dietary and nutritional supplements," said Rebecca Costello, PhD, deputy director of the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, which was established by Congress to foster supplement research. "But the herbals are very questionable, and the science base on many of them is scant." Texas family physician Robert P. Carroll Jr., MD, who last year called on the AMA to seek tighter regulation said, "You don't know what crap you're getting with these things."


    Special on Dietary Supplements
    Washington Post
    Over three years of articles are archived here. Many are on herbal remedies, their side effects, and interactions.


    Marketing to Kids
    Guy Gugliotta - Washington Post (June 18, 2000)
    Dietary supplement companies have begun aggressively targeting children and parents as consumers of their products, among them powerful chemicals designed to help kids gain strength, lose weight or treat illnesses ranging from colds and flu to depression and even attention deficit disorder.


    Herbal Remedy Ripoffs
    Dallas investigative report demonstrates that nearly half of the forty supplements from Dallas store shelves failed laboratory tests. In some cases capsules contained no active ingredient at all.


    Herbal Health Concerns Grow
    Guy Gugliotta - Washington Post (March 19, 2000)
    Mounting evidence suggests that increasing numbers of Americans are falling seriously ill or even dying after taking dietary supplements that promise everything from extra energy to sounder sleep.

    The victims include men and women of all ages as well as children whose parents are feeding them snacks, drinks and nostrums made with herbal supplements that are neither regulated by the federal government nor tested for their effects on the young.

    While the Food and Drug Administration issues periodic warnings about the dangers of individual supplements, no organization or agency has ever made a comprehensive analysis of the sickness and death associated with them.


    Assessing the Quality of Botanical Preparations
    - Medscape 2000
    Botanical products present challenges from a regulatory and safety perspective because plants contain a wide variety of potentially active constituents with synergistic potential. Potential problems include both intentional and unintentional contamination as well as inconsistent concentration of active ingredients. Unfortunately, despite recent industry attempts to self-regulate, there are no definitive standards by which to judge herbal supplements.


    Fatal Health Problems Tied to Lack of Regulation
    Alarmed by widespread reports of serious health problems - some leading to death - associated with herbal remedies, a group of Bay Area doctors and nutrition experts is calling for new oversight of the nation's burgeoning $12 billion dietary supplement industry.

    Hundreds of medical emergencies have been linked to a host of herbal supplements that can be bought without prescription, even though few scientific studies have been conducted to assess their safety and dietary value.



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