Operation Cure.All - Whose Cure?
by Rufina James
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Something very disturbing happened recently. The long arm of the government
just got longer. Going by the name of Operation Cure All, the FDA and the FTC
have launched a campaign to cure themselves of all competition.
Apparently, the growing popularity of alternative medicine and sales of health
products are putting a dent in big medicine's pockets. So much so, that they've
launched a serious campaign on and offline against it.
The government's proclaimed goal is protecting the health of citizens. To that
end, testimonials are basically deemed unsubstantiated and deceptive unless
they follow stringent rules and legalities set up by the government.
One of these rules is that testimonials and endorsements must be backed up
by "competent and reliable scientific evidence" (i.e., scientific
tests, analyses, research, and studies). While this sounds commendable, what
does this really mean?
It means that unless there are clinical studies, research, tests and analysis
behind even the most mundane statement, it cannot be used. Most of us are not
qualified to do scientific research, nor do we have the money to hire a scientist
to do it for us every time we want to give a testimonial.
The government requires that testimonials cannot imply that they treat, cure,
prevent, or mitigate any disease. What makes it difficult is that exactly what
is permissible and what is not is extremely complex and baffling. The average
person could not possibly understand the 50 pages the FDA takes up explaining
the regulations and all their intricacies without a skilled lawyer.
In addition, there are only certain ways testimonials can be structured, called
"structure/function" rules. In most cases, a genuine statement from
an average person would not fill the criteria of "structure/function."
Even if someone were aware of the stringent rules that applied, it would be
very difficult for anyone but a skilled lawyer to give an acceptable testimony.
Since very few testimonies are legal, this nearly completely and conveniently
eliminates using them. As an added burden, if all the correct documentation
exists and the testimony is structured correctly, a report must be filed with
the FDA within 30 days of using the testimony. It appears the government has
found a way to tie the hands of Internet health companies so that testimonies
about their products cannot be heard.
Another one of the new regulations is under the guise of 'deception.' While
I agree that advertising should not be misleading, it is now illegal for health
websites to mention the name of a condition, such as 'headache,' 'arthritis,'
'heart disease,' or even 'pain' anywhere, not only in testimonials. Symptoms
relating to diseases also cannot be used because they IMPLY a disease condition.
Even a factual statement such as, "According to the National Cancer Institute,
ingredient X protects smoker's lungs," is considered an impermissible disease
claim.
Basically, no relationship can exist between a supplement and a disease condition.
Even natural states such as pregnancy, menopause and menstrual cycles qualify
as diseases! All I can say is, its going to be very hard for alternative health
websites to explain their products in anything but the most watered-down of
terms.
The other major area of concern is that the FDA has taken the position that
Internet advertising qualifies as labeling, and therefore falls within its scope
of its authority.
So, if someone makes a claim that a supplement will treat, cure, prevent, or
mitigate a disease, the supplement loses its status as a supplement and is then
categorized as a drug.
And, all drugs must pass the FDA's review process to ensure that they are safe
and effective for their represented uses. This is a rigorous and incredibly
expensive and lengthy review process that nobody really wants to go through
- not even the drug companies! But until it is completed, the FDA considers the
product to be an unapproved new drug, which may not be marketed. And putting
some teeth into their decree, the FDA has the authority to seize the product
if it is distributed to the public.
Now that's power! Designed to make Internet health marketers shake in their
boots, no doubt.
The FDA and FTC take the position that they have the jurisdiction to control
freedom of speech for the sake of protecting public health. They argue that
'deception' is misleading the public. They are doing their best to discredit
promotions that use words like "exclusive products," "secret
ingredient" or "ancient remedy" — claiming that these are
meaningless scientific terms.
As far as I know, nobody was ever trying to call them scientific terms. They
are marketing terms, pure and simple. They were never meant to be scientific.
Would you really mistake "secret ingredient" or "ancient remedy"
for a scientific term? You'll find these terms in many books on headlines and
sales letters. I don't think anyone would be foolish enough to go searching
for them in a researcher's study.
The government knows these are advertising tools. They allow advertising in
every other field. Are they assuming you can't tell the difference? Or are they just trying to confuse you into believing you are being deceived?
The government gave their approval for drug companies to advertise their prescription
medications in TV commercials and in magazine ads. TV viewers are blasted with
them every night. But they want to make sure that information about natural
products is suppressed. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out what's
going on here.
The FDA claims it is afraid that "people could cancel their surgery, radiation
or chemotherapy in favor of herbal cures that cost hundreds of dollars."
I'd like to ask if the government has totaled up the cost of surgery, radiation
and chemotherapy lately? These established medical treatments total up into
the tens of thousands, not hundreds, per person. But I don't see the government
concerned about these skyrocketing costs.
After all, there's a whole industry out there profiting from it. Think of all
the hospitals and cancer centers in existence with all the equipment they purchase
and all the people they employ. Think of all the companies that manufacture
this specialized equipment. And think of all the medical schools and nursing
schools that train doctors and nurses to use it. Think of the drug companies
that manufacture chemo and all the money they make from it. And don't forget
the insurance companies.
When you think of all this, you can get a picture of the scope of just the
'cancer industry' alone. Yet the government is afraid a few people might spend
a few hundred dollars on natural substances? No, they are afraid the cancer
industry might lose money. They are afraid that since the sales of health items
are increasing, they are losing their edge — that their brainwashing of
the public is growing thin. Hence, they have come out with a new campaign of
fresh ideas for re-brainwashing the public.
Also targeted is a device that delivers a mild electric current that purportedly
kills the parasites causing such serious diseases as cancer and Alzheimer's.
I tried such a device personally. Did it work? Not in the long run. But I'm
glad I had the freedom to try it and find out for myself. The mild electric
current didn't hurt me and the cost was insignificant.
I also tried colloidal silver and found it didn't work for me. Nor did it harm
me. I really don't need the government's protection for something that is harmless.
And I don't need the government making my decisions for me.
The FDA and FTC are also concerned that those with HIV or AIDS could use St.
John's Wort as a treatment for the disease. And that St. John's Wort is known
to interfere with proven HIV/AIDS medications. I seriously doubt that very many
HIV or AIDS patients would use St. John's Wort as their sole treatment. But
if they do, why should the government prohibit them? Why shouldn't they have
the choice?
I picked up an issue of 'People' magazine the other day. I was astounded when
I opened to a very convincing full-color, two-page ad placed by the government
discrediting what they called 'unsubstantiated and undocumented' claims by health
companies. They urged readers not to try any health product without discussing
it with their doctor first and going to the government website.
Discussing it with your doctor? We can pretty well predict how that will turn
out. How many doctors know anything about all the health products available?
How many doctors even know anything about nutrition, considering doctors are
only required to take one course on nutrition? How many doctors are interested
in anything natural, considering they are trained to dispense drugs, and are
given bonuses and incentives to do so (even all-expense paid vacations to exotic
locations for 'training')? How many doctors even care that the medicine they
give you for your heart may damage your nerves or your liver?
Several times, I have refused medication due to side effects. I was treated
with utter disgust and contempt by the doctors and their staff. A friend of
mine canceled surgery on her nose for a skin problem, only to receive an irate
call from her doctor who blamed her for negatively impacting his income!
Not only that, but I have seen many of my friends and relatives go through
chemo. I've seen what it can do to the body and the brain. And I've seen too
many young women die horrible deaths shortly after starting chemo. And still
others died the second time around, because the chemo-treated cancer returned.
Yet the only three legal treatments for cancer in this country are chemotherapy,
surgery, and radiation.
Does the government require doctors to give you the rates of failure with chemo
or the side-effects of radiation? Does the government even require the doctors
to tell you that there were 17,000 deaths from Aspirin alone last year? How
about the fact that doctors are the third leading cause of death in America
today?
That's right, according to the "Journal of the American Medical Association"
Vol. 284 July 26, 2000, things like unnecessary surgery, medication errors,
negative effects of drugs, etc., cause almost as many deaths as heart disease
and cancer.
This comes to a total to 250,000 deaths per year from iatrogenic causes! Iatrogenic
means it was caused by a physician's activity, manner, or therapy. And these
estimates are for deaths only and do not include negative effects that are associated
with disability or discomfort!
It is a known fact the US health care system is the most expensive in the world,
yet the quality of health in the US rates poorly. In a recent comparison of
the health care in 13 countries, the United States ranked an average of 12th
(second from the bottom) for 16 available health indicators. In another study
by the World Health Organization of 25 industrialized countries, the US ranked
15th.
This prompts me to ask, who is the government protecting? And why?
I'll never forget one brave woman with cancer that I knew who chose to die
naturally, without chemo or radiation. She died in peace, surrounded by her
loving family, with all her wits about her. In contrast, I remember the horrible
deaths of my friends who received full doses of chemo and died anyway. They
had loving families too, but they did not die gracefully or in peace. The chemo
had affected their mental (and emotional and physical) faculties and they lost
touch with the world long before it seemed right.
And then, I read about how 'required' food labels, mandated by the FDA, are
concealing a hardened killer — trans fat, found primarily in baked foods
and snack foods. The labels are not required to mention trans fat. Yet trans
fat is considered worse than saturated fat by some scientists. It elevates bad
cholesterol; lowers good cholesterol; increases triglycerides; and makes blood
platelets stickier, increasing the chance of clots. Even if the saturated fat
content of a food is low, the trans fat content can be very high.
Back in 1999 a cost-benefit analysis done for the FDA estimated that labeling
trans fat would save $3 billion to $8 billion annually in averted heart disease
costs. And labeling would save from 2,000 to 5,000 lives a year. But the FDA
has not yet required industrial trans fat to be listed on labels. This means
the labels are actually MISLEADING heart patients, diabetics, athletes and millions
of other consumers who watch their fat intake.
But the FDA has been reluctant to require labeling. Aren't they concerned that
'Nutritional Facts' labels on foods are misleading? Perhaps their logic is,
why should they bother the big snack food manufacturers? After all, they insure
the hospitals get plenty of patients. And nobody knows about trans fat anyway.
It's so much easier to target the health food and supplement industry. It's
so much easier to declare that websites are a form of 'labels' and slap on regulations.
And its easy to discredit a smaller industry that is concerned about real health.
Every time the FDA attempts to require that nutritional supplements be obtained
by prescription only, there is tremendous public outcry. Petitions are circulated,
letters are sent in, calls are placed. The government is forced to back off
due to public indignation. Now, they have found a way to gain a stronghold.
They have found a way to slip suppression of nutritional information past the
public. They are hoping you never know of this. And that you don't notice what
is not being said so that they can creep a little further, with each new regulation,
into taking your health choices away until they are eventually controlling all
your health decisions.
Ask yourself, whose health is the government really concerned about? Yours
or the pockets of the drug and medical industry?
Don't let them take your choices away from you.
If we don't speak out individually and collectively, the government will take
further infringements upon our freedom of choice in health. If you would like
your voice to be heard, please contact your federal representatives and complain.
You can find the names and contact information of your representatives here:
http://www.house.gov and your senators here: http://www.senate.gov/
And why not send a copy of your letter to the FDA: Gary Dykstra, Deputy Associate
Commissioner for Regulatory Affairs, FDA, email: GDYKSTRA@ORA.FDA.GOV (But please
don't send this article to the FDA)
Rufina James
P.S. Here's a list of URLs where you can find more information:
The article "Operation Cure.All" targets Internet Fraud"
at: http://www.mlmlaw.com/news/opcureall.html
Essential reading — "My testimonial" (discusses use of testimonials)
found at:
http://www.mlmlaw.com/saleswatch/saleswatch105a.html#MyTestimonial
Excellent examples given here; legalities explained: (This is a pdf file and
requires Abobe Acrobat to view. Well worth it)
http://www.mlmlaw.com/saleswatch/StructureFunctionRule.pdf
More info: http://www.mlmlaw.com/saleswatch.html
Government Sites:
http://www.ftc.gov/opa/2001/06/cureall.htm
http://www.fda.gov/fdac/features/2001/501_war.html
FTC's Virtual Health Treatments website:
www.ftc.gov/healthclaims
FDA's Buying Medicines and Medical Products Online websites:
www.fda.gov/oc/buyonline
www.healthfinder.gov
http://www.fda.gov/opacom/laws/fdcact/fdcact1.htm
http://www.fda.gov/opacom/laws/fdcact/fdctoc.htm
Copyright 2001 Rufina James
www.therealessentials.com
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