Alternative Medicine Is Being Integrated Into The Mainstream

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MARILYNN MARCHIONE | 06/ 8/09 03:33 AM | AP

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BALTIMORE — At one of the nation's top trauma hospitals, a nurse circles a patient's bed, humming and waving her arms as if shooing evil spirits. Another woman rubs a quartz bowl with a wand, making tunes that mix with the beeping monitors and hissing respirator keeping the man alive.

They are doing Reiki therapy, which claims to heal through invisible energy fields. The anesthesia chief, Dr. Richard Dutton, calls it "mystical mumbo jumbo." Still, he's a fan.

"It's self-hypnosis" that can help patients relax, he said. "If you tell yourself you have less pain, you actually do have less pain."

Alternative medicine has become mainstream. It is finding wider acceptance by doctors, insurers and hospitals like the shock trauma center at the University of Maryland Medical Center. Consumer spending on it in some cases rivals that of traditional health care.

People turn to unconventional therapies and herbal remedies for everything from hot flashes and trouble sleeping to cancer and heart disease. They crave more "care" in their health care. They distrust drug companies and the government. They want natural, safer remedies.

But often, that is not what they get. Government actions and powerful interest groups have left consumers vulnerable to flawed products and misleading marketing.

Dietary supplements do not have to be proved safe or effective before they can be sold. Some contain natural things you might not want, such as lead and arsenic. Some interfere with other things you may be taking, such as birth control pills.

"Herbals are medicines," with good and bad effects, said Bruce Silverglade of the consumer group Center for Science in the Public Interest.

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Contrary to their little-guy image, many of these products are made by big businesses. Ingredients and their countries of origin are a mystery to consumers. They are marketed in ways that manipulate emotions, just like ads for hot cars and cool clothes. Some make claims that average people can't parse as proof of effectiveness or blather, like "restores cell-to-cell communication."

Even therapies that may help certain conditions, such as acupuncture, are being touted for uses beyond their evidence.

An Associated Press review of dozens of studies and interviews with more than 100 sources found an underground medical system operating in plain sight, with a different standard than the rest of medical care, and millions of people using it on blind faith.

How did things get this way?

Fifteen years ago, Congress decided to allow dietary and herbal supplements to be sold without federal Food and Drug Administration approval. The number of products soared, from about 4,000 then to well over 40,000 now.

Ten years ago, Congress created a new federal agency to study supplements and unconventional therapies. But more than $2.5 billion of tax-financed research has not found any cures or major treatment advances, aside from certain uses for acupuncture and ginger for chemotherapy-related nausea. If anything, evidence has mounted that many of these pills and therapies lack value.

Yet they are finding ever-wider use:

_Big hospitals and clinics increasingly offer alternative therapies. Many just offer stress reducers like meditation, yoga and massage. But some offer treatments with little or no scientific basis, to patients who are emotionally vulnerable and gravely ill. The Baltimore hospital, for example, is not charging for Reiki but wants to if it can be shown to help. Other hospitals earn fees from treatments such as acupuncture, which insurance does not always cover if the purpose is not sufficiently proven. The giant HMO Kaiser Permanente pays for members to go to a Portland, Ore., doctor who prescribes ayurvedics _ traditional herbal remedies from India.

_Some medical schools are teaching future doctors about alternative medicine, sometimes with federal grants. The goal is educating them about what patients are using so they can give evidence-based, nonjudgmental care. But some schools have ties to alternative medicine practitioners and advocates. A University of Minnesota program lets students study nontraditional healing methods at a center in Hawaii supported by a philanthropist fan of such care, though students pay their own travel and living expenses. A private foundation that wants wider inclusion of nontraditional methods sponsors fellowships for hands-on experience at the University of Arizona's Program in Integrative Medicine, headed by well-known advocate Dr. Andrew Weil.

_Health insurers are cutting deals to let alternative medicine providers market supplements and services directly to members. At least one insurer promotes these to members with a discount, perhaps leaving an incorrect impression they are covered services and medically sound. Some insurers steer patients to Internet sellers of supplements, even though patients must pay for these out of pocket. There are networks of alternative medicine providers that contract with big employers, just like HMOs.

A few herbal supplements can directly threaten health. A surprising number do not supply what their labels claim, contain potentially harmful substances like lead, or are laced with hidden versions of prescription drugs.

"In testing, one out of four supplements has a problem," said Dr. Tod Cooperman, president of ConsumerLab.com, an independent company that rates such products.

Even when the ingredients aren't risky, spending money for a product with no proven benefit is no small harm when the economy is bad and people can't afford health insurance or healthy food.

But sometimes the cost is far greater. Cancer patients can lose their only chance of beating the disease by gambling on unproven treatments. People with clogged arteries can suffer a heart attack. Children can be harmed by unproven therapies forced on them by parents who distrust conventional medicine.

Mainstream medicine and prescription drugs have problems, too. Popular drugs such as the painkillers Vioxx and Bextra have been pulled from the market after serious side effects emerged once they were widely used by consumers. But at least there are regulatory systems, guideline-setting groups and watchdog agencies helping to keep traditional medicine in line.

The safety net for alternative medicine is far flimsier.

The latest government survey shows the magnitude of risk: More than a third of Americans use unconventional therapies, including acupuncture, homeopathy, chiropractic, and native or traditional healing methods. These practitioners are largely self-policing, with their own schools and accreditation groups. Some states license certain types, like acupuncturists; others do not.

Tens of millions of Americans take dietary supplements _ vitamins, minerals and herbs, ranging from ginseng and selenium to fish oil and zinc, said Steven Mister, president of the Council for Responsible Nutrition, an industry trade group.

"We bristle when people talk about us as if we're just fringe," he said. Supplements are "an insurance policy" if someone doesn't always eat right, he said.

In fact, some are widely recommended by doctors _ prenatal vitamins for pregnant women, calcium for older women at risk of osteoporosis, and fish oil for some heart patients, for example. These uses are generally thought to be safe, although independent testing has found quality problems and occasional safety concerns with specific products, such as too much or too little of a vitamin.

Some studies suggest that vitamin deficiencies can raise the risk of disease. But it is not clear that taking supplements will fix that, and research has found hints of harm, said Dr. Jeffrey White, complementary and alternative medicine chief at the National Cancer Institute. A doctor with a big interest in nutrition, he sees the field as "an area of opportunity" that deserves serious study.

So does Dr. Josephine Briggs, director of the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, the federal agency Congress created a decade ago.

"Most patients are not treated very satisfactorily," Briggs said. "If we had highly effective, satisfactory conventional treatment we probably wouldn't have as much need for these other strategies and as much public interest in them."

Even critics of alternative medicine providers understand their appeal.

"They give you a lot of time. They treat you like someone special," said R. Barker Bausell, a University of Maryland biostatistician who wrote "Snake Oil Science," a book about flawed research in the field.

That is why Dr. Mitchell Gaynor, a cancer specialist at the Weill-Cornell Medical Center in New York, said he includes nutrition testing and counseling, meditation and relaxation techniques in his treatment, though not everyone would agree with some of the things he recommends.

"You do have people who will say 'chemotherapy is just poison,'" said Gaynor, who tells them he doesn't agree. He'll say: "Cancer takes decades to develop, so you're not going to be able to think that all of a sudden you're going to change your diet or do meditation (and cure it). You need to treat it medically. You can still do things to make your diet better. You can still do meditation to reduce your stress."

Once their fears and feelings are acknowledged, most patients "will do the right thing, do everything they can to save their life," Gaynor said.

Many people buy supplements to treat life's little miseries _ trouble falling asleep, menopausal hot flashes, memory lapses, the need to lose weight, sexual problems.

The Dietary Supplement and Health Education Act of 1994 exempted such products from needing FDA approval or proof of safety or effectiveness before they go on sale.

"That has resulted in consumers wasting billions of dollars on products of either no or dubious benefit," said Silverglade of the public interest group.

Many hope that President Barack Obama's administration will take a new look. In the meantime, some outlandish claims are drawing a backlash. The industry has stepped up self-policing _ the Council for Responsible Nutrition hired a lawyer to work with the Council of Better Business Bureaus and file complaints against problem sellers.

"We certainly don't think this is a huge problem in the industry," Mister said, but he acknowledges occasionally seeing infomercials "that promise the world."

"The outliers were making the public feel that this entire industry was just snake oil and that there weren't any legitimate products," said Andrea Levine, ad division chief for the business bureaus.

The FDA just issued its first guidelines for good manufacturing practices, aimed at improving supplement safety. Consumer groups say the rules don't go far enough _ for example, they don't set limits on contaminants like lead and arsenic _ but they do give the FDA more leverage after problems come to light.

The Federal Trade Commission is filing more complaints about deceptive marketing. One of the largest settlements occurred last August _ $30 million from the makers of Airborne, a product marketed with a folksy "invented by a teacher" slogan that claimed to ward off germs spread through the air.

People need to keep a healthy skepticism about that magical marketing term "natural," said Kathy Allen, a dietitian at Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa, Fla.

The truth is, supplements lack proof of safety or benefit. Asked to take a drug under those terms, "most of us would say 'no,'" Allen said. "When it says 'natural,' the perception is there is no harm. And that is just not true."

___

On the Net:

National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine: http://nccam.nih.gov/

Anti-scam site: http://www.quackwatch.com

Tips from FDA: http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/DMS/ds-savvy.html

BALTIMORE — At one of the nation's top trauma hospitals, a nurse circles a patient's bed, humming and waving her arms as if shooing evil spirits. Another woman rubs a quartz bowl with a wand, ma...
BALTIMORE — At one of the nation's top trauma hospitals, a nurse circles a patient's bed, humming and waving her arms as if shooing evil spirits. Another woman rubs a quartz bowl with a wand, ma...
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You would be surprised by how a dramatic change in diet can make you feel ten times better. I have a brain tumor that has caused me endless medical problems over the past 5 years. As soon as I cut out gluten, refined sugar, meat and dairy--I felt amazing. I'm macrobiotic now, but even if that is too crazy of a diet for most to consider there are so many simple easy ways to get yourselves feeling well again. Try cutting out beef and poultry for 30 days and see how you feel. If you are afraid you won't be able to make those great comfort food meals on that diet, check out my cooking blog: http://cookingwithdia.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:48 PM on 06/10/2009
- bmonaghan I'm a Fan of bmonaghan 5 fans permalink
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Dia - Went to your sight. Inspiring and the foods look fantastic. Have you tried fresh, locally grown herbal teas? Check out

http://www.prlog.org/10236003-homegrown-herb-and-tea-launches-first-online-herbal-tea-apothecary.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:57 AM on 06/11/2009
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Thanks bmonagham, I saved that to my favorites. :) I drink a lot of white tea, which you will know of since you are into teas. Many people haven't heard of it--it is basically a green tea but whiter. It comes from the Camellia sinensis plant, and is unoxidized. It is supposed to have more anti viral and anti bacterial qualities than green tea. And you can't drink it with sugar, but it tastes sweet without it.
http://cookingwithdia.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:37 AM on 06/11/2009

All substances that are meant for health improvement, be they medicines, herbs, vitamins, should be held to the same standards of testing. You shouldn't be closed to new ideas, but they also have to be proven before they are approved.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:10 PM on 06/09/2009
- bmonaghan I'm a Fan of bmonaghan 5 fans permalink
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This is my problem with your logic: What does it mean to be "proven?" We have this western view towards health which basically boils down to: Take a pill, feel better. The "standards" you propose basically follow those principles. I agree that there needs to be some sort of checks - but herbs are not meant to be consumed as pills. Herbs have been used by humans for 25,000 years, but I guarantee you it wasn't until the last fifty years that we were pulverizing them into fine dust and then stuffing them into gelatin capsules and then claiming they could cure things! Of course this doesn't work! You look where herbs have been "proven" to lead to longevity for example ( http://www.prlog.org/10235925-nbc-reports-drinking-herbal-tea-leads-to-longer-healthier-life.html ) or cure insomnia ( http://www.prlog.org/10254993-lack-of-sleep-reported-to-cause-brain-damage-premature-death-and-other-health-issues.html ) and other maladies and you will see that using herbs for medicinal purposes is not simply taking a pill or drinking some herbal tea (the herb in herbal tea is some of the lowest quality). Use herbs and other alternatives properly without this western mindset and they will change your life.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:08 AM on 06/11/2009

"Use herbs and other alternatives properly without this western mindset and they will change your life."

What is the difference between taking an herb as-is or grinding it into a pill and taking it, when they are pharmarcologically the same, and thus have an identical effect on the body? I think you nailed it - the mindset. It's like you're arguing that herbs are a placeebo. Nice work.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:46 AM on 06/11/2009

I'm not sure how eating well and excercising became an alternative therapy. Last time I went to my doctor these were the number one issues discussed. The specific advantages of a healthy lifestyle are detailed to exactitude in peer reviewed medical literature. People who claim that western medicine just discovered these things need to put on their history caps and do a little reading.

Alternative remedies are highly effective placeebos unless proven to work, at which point they immediately become standard medicine. If alternative therapies were truly effective, the National Institute of Health would have more to show for its 2.5 BILLION dollar complimentary and alternative medicine investment than accupuncture for lower back pain. Two-point-­five-billi­on = 1 marginal treatment. That's a great investment...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:01 PM on 06/09/2009
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It is so easy to suffer from traditional care. We are still subjected to chemo and radiation for cancer. There are no smart drugs, and the closest thing to one - laetrile, is banned, and has not been useful to the pharma people in designing new drugs. And of the drugs they do provide, they are not even tested, or inspected.
We are all guinea pigs. Would you volunteer for a double blind test? Why? If they knew what they were doing, they would not need them.

It is so easy to have a slight chest pain, and end up in intensive care with a blood clot in the lung that will kill you, that it is not funny. Our health care system consists of too many scanners and scan readers, to be reliable.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:42 AM on 06/09/2009
- Seldon I'm a Fan of Seldon 11 fans permalink

me thinks you didn't actually read the article

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:36 AM on 06/09/2009
- Conk I'm a Fan of Conk 18 fans permalink
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aliceautumn, you are so lost. The truth is the truth, no matter if you find it in the past. Modern times brought us big drug companies, the most evil, vile entities on Earth. Mother Nature CURES us and keeps us healthy. Modern technology cuts, burns, and poisons us with it's failed remedies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:56 AM on 06/09/2009
- VicDaring I'm a Fan of VicDaring 8 fans permalink

Perfect.

Just go with the new-age feel-good mantra of "Natural Good...Artificial Bad," and you can just turn off your brain and enjoy your smug superiority.

Without ever pausing to think that rattlesnake venom and poison mushrooms are natural. And aspirin is artificial.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 AM on 06/09/2009
- bmonaghan I'm a Fan of bmonaghan 5 fans permalink
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I agree. Herbs are a great way to go - however - where you buy your herbs and how you ingest them make a huge difference. In fact, buying over the counter supplements even from leading heath food stores could be killing you as this study shows.

http://www.prlog.org/10245740-herbal-supplements-pose-serious-health-risk-study-finds.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:55 AM on 06/09/2009
- SangZe I'm a Fan of SangZe 34 fans permalink

Forget it. The AMA owns the country.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:19 AM on 06/09/2009
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A peoples movement has brought these medicines to greater popularity. It has been their popularity that has been tier biggest enemy. Ephedra was misused for years by companies with profits in mind and putting people at risk even death. Only highly trained Chinese or Western Herbologists with national board certifications are the safe source for these medicines. Beware Whole foods does not attempt to advise because their staff is under-trained. Acupuncture seems to be of great interest to the traditional medical community enough that doctors MD, DC, DO are getting minimal training of only 100 hours to perform a specialized invasive procedure which takes four times the amount of training they receive. Do not self inform and self prescribe see a Professional Acupuncturist or Naturopathic doctor for most things. Keep your Physician informed and instruct them to communicate with your team of professionals.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:32 PM on 06/09/2009
- RMankovitz I'm a Fan of RMankovitz 48 fans permalink
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Here is some food for thought. Can you imagine someone who can stay healthy and yet never take a prescription or OTC drug or any herbs or other supplements for their entire life? Someone who never gets sick, not even a sniffle, never goes to the doctor, never brushes their teeth or flosses and yet has perfect dentition, perfect gums, no cavities, straight teeth? Someone who has perfect bone density, no aches, no pains, beautiful features, and a very happy disposition? Who has no cancer, no degenerative diseases, no autoimmune diseases, no reproductive problems? Females who give birth with no help, and with no complications? Who eat a diet that we never heard of? Who, other than for injuries or accidents, lived a very long and healthy life?

Crazy idea, right? OK, let's try this. Substitute "animal" for a person, and run through the list again. Getting closer? Now substitute Paleo ancestor - humans living more than say 150,000 years ago. At a time before there were cities, empires, written words, Greeks, Romans, Egyptians, organized religions, crops, or domesticated animals. Ridiculous, you say. Everybody "knows" life back then was nasty, brutish and short. That everybody died young, with very high infant mortality, and a great deal of illness. Right? Wrong. Just ask any paleopathologist, if you can find one. The consensus among credible anthropologists is what I described in the first paragraph. Want to know more? Read my book: "The Original Diet."

Roy Mankovitz, Director
www.MontecitoWellness.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:49 PM on 06/08/2009
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Sir, with all due respect for your position and your interesting premise; your alumni page at Columbia indicates you claim to be a Certified Nutritional Consultant and a Board Certified Holistic Health Practitioner. According to Quackwatch.org:

"The American Association of Nutritional Consultants issues the Certified Nutritional Consultant (CNC) credential to persons who take an open-book test. The CNC credential should be regarded as bogus."

I'm afraid that your board certification is even less meaningful. Instead of submitting your findings to peer review, publishing a summary of your findings for professional review, etc - you push a few books. One claiming "The Original DIet" to have discovered our ancestor's perfect diet? A diet common across the paleolithic world, from the Australian Outback to the Arctic Circle to the Serengeti? Does your book include recipes for locusts and bush meat?

You sir, are just another sinister duck.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:51 AM on 06/09/2009
- RMankovitz I'm a Fan of RMankovitz 48 fans permalink
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Thank you for your supportive comments and research. If you dig deep enough, you will find that quackwatch is funded by the medical establishment as a sinister approach to discrediting any person or organization that would have the audacity to propose alternatives threatening their business model, such as illness prevention. Since they are the third leading cause of death in the US, they have to do something to trick the unsophisticated into following their lead. I see you brought into it - how has that been working for you?

You correctly interpret my contributions to diet as a theory, and you apparently do not like theories that have not been peer reviewed. Actually, if you read my books (you can get a copy at a library and it will not cost you a dime), you will see that the theories have been endorsed by MDs, biologic dentists, medical researchers, and psychotherapists. They have the intellectual curiosity to pursue intriguing alternatives that are backed by tons of research - there are over 350 peer-reviewed references in my books, most of which have never been read by mainstream nutritionists. As a prolific inventor, I thrive on researching and proposing new ideas that may be disruptive.

I applaud those who are willing to experiment with alternatives, and I also respect those who prefer to be naysayers, contribute nothing to the knowledge base, follow the party line, and usually end up leading long and unhealthy lives. How is that working for you?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:53 AM on 06/09/2009
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Back to the Dark Ages! Yes, it worked so well then. Life expectancy of about 30 usually without most of your teeth.

I have found that people over the age of 65 seem to love technology and innovation. They remember life without vaccines, antibiotics, washing machines, airconditioning in the home, etc... They remember how hard life was when you had to grow your own food, churn your own butter and if when you had a baby you tried not to get too attached because it might not make it to its 5th birthday. Every senior I know loves new gadgets and ideas. They know it is vital to the human race to move forward, not back. The silly younger generation looks back in nostalgia, hoping to find wisdom or insight, a magic potion from a movie or novel.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:11 PM on 06/08/2009
- TheBlackCat I'm a Fan of TheBlackCat 230 fans permalink
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Very well said.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:01 AM on 06/09/2009
- zizyphus I'm a Fan of zizyphus 101 fans permalink
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Herbs kept the human race going for millions of years. What is new and unknown, are the long term effects of the many synthetic chemicals used today. Study herbs, and know all the simple plants that keep people healthy. Eating more green plants is the secret to good health. Western medicine excels in treating the results of auto accidents, etc. whereas TCM treats chronic conditions better. Our generation grew up eating fake, processed food, surrounded by synthetic chemicals, an experiment whose results are seen in the number of new developmental disorders we now see in our children.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:41 PM on 06/08/2009

herbs kept the human race going for millions of years? people ingested all kinds of strange and dangerous plants throughout human history. a casual reading of any cultures history with all the un-hippie truth included will disabuse you of this faith. Many people poisoned themselves in blissful ignorance in thousands of ways (like the romans getting lead poisoning from leaden casks). you wonder what the long term affects of certain synthetic chemicals are, as if our forefathers had any idea what the long term affects of the herbs were.additionally, you say "synthetic" as if there is something inherently wrong with synthesizing a chemical. its just a process. i can synthesize water in a lab if i want to and it will have the same chemical properties as water found in a spring (though it will likely be purer). processed food/veggies belongs in another discussion. western doctors recommend eating lots of greens and avoiding processed foods, so I don't see the point.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:22 PM on 06/08/2009
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Yeah goof wad, what do you think herbs are comprised of? Chemicals! Bravo rulonhames.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:13 PM on 06/08/2009
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Western docs are just getting on the healthy eating/lifestyle bandwagon that alternative practioners have been recommending for years and years. The author (zyziphus) is right: modern medicine is great w/catastrophic care; wellness? not so much.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:45 PM on 06/08/2009
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Actually your water will lack trace minerals that contribute to greater health, that is the paradox, mankind cannot do as well as nature. Better living through chemistry is becoming unhealthy to our world. Antibiotics and antidepressants pollute our water. Hypodermic needles wash on our shores. Sustainability is what worries me.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:47 PM on 06/09/2009
- Whatevah I'm a Fan of Whatevah 28 fans permalink
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When congress deregulated nutritional supplements in 1994, they unleashed a flood of quack medical products. We really need some good old fashioned food and drug regulations to get this stuff off the market.

Start with the so-called "male enhancement" pills, move on to the fake diet aids, get rid of the phony arthritis cures, and head off that "Head On - Apply Directly to the Forehead" crap.

We receive proof daily that 50 percent of the population has below average intelligence.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:38 PM on 06/08/2009
- Seldon I'm a Fan of Seldon 11 fans permalink

Excellant article.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:57 PM on 06/08/2009
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"Integrated Into The Mainstream" Sounds more like "getting in on the scam." Even calling it "alternative health" is misleading. Practitioners who spout unproven - and unprovable - claims, products without track records or scientific basis, and worst of all big pharma and big med seeing a massive profit potential and enabling all of this.

Would you hire a mechanic that never managed to fix a car, used counterfeit or bogus parts, and then defended himself by claiming you and the car aren't in harmony? The same people who inspect every milk carton in the store checking expiration dates think nothing of swallowing "remedies" with no proven results, no requirement for their ingredients to be active, and no recourse when they don't work.

Or you can just stick to homeopathic pills - since they actually contain no detectable levels of their purported ingredients and are literally just sugar pills.

If you want to base your health on fiction, try Star Trek's Dr, McCoy - ". . .Who knows? It might eventually cure the common cold, but lengthen lives? Poppycock. I can do more for you if you just eat right and exercise regularly." (The Omega Glory.)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:13 AM on 06/08/2009
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Snake Oil.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:14 PM on 06/08/2009
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