The Pan Pharmaceuticals Recall of Alternative Medicines & The Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA)
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The Pan Recall - a crisis in alternative medicine
The following article by Eve Hillary regarding the Pan crisis draws attention to the global
agenda of multi-national companies whose concern is with profits and not
the safety or availability of dietary supplements supplied to the ordinary
consumer. The track record of the medico-pharmaceutical industry in this
regard should be of grave concern to all who wish to preserve their right
to freedom of choice.
Moynihan (1)
for instance, has recently drawn attention to the controversy surrounding the use of
hormone replacement drugs in an article entitled "HRT's Benefits
are Measured in Profits". According to Moynihan: "On May
8 The New England Journal of Medicine reported that HRT "had no
clinically meaningful benefits on health-related quality of life"
when compared with a placebo." In spite of this, as is pointed
out by Moynihan (1):
"Just a few years ago senior medical specialists considered HRT
such a wonder drug they would gladly have put it in the drinking water. A
2000 Australasian Menopause Society booklet suggested HRT could prevent
heart disease, Alzheimer's and ageing skin, yet it failed to mention the
established side-effect of blood clots, or the accumulating evidence that
the drugs were causing heart disease."
Even more disturbing however are claims that new diseases are being
invented by drug companies and researchers simply to build new markets for
drugs (2,3).
Eve Hillary's article is a stark reminder of the underlying agenda of many who
realise only too well that the success of any campaign of misinformation
generally depends upon consumers not finding out the truth until it is too late. It
is a reminder of the importance of eternal vigilance if consumers are to
safeguard their rights and prevent absolute domination by world wide drug
companies.
In my accompanying article (see The Pan Crisis)
I drew attention to the fact that the statements made by certain
authorities, while not consistent with scientific evidence, are in fact consistent with the existence of a somewhat
less publicised commercial agenda.
Read on for an insight into the minds of those whose perspective is
about as remote from the individual as it is possible to be.
I thank Eve Hillary for permission to present this article here in an
effort to make the truth available to all.
References
1.http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/05/28/1053801419770.html
See: Moynihan, R., HRT's benefits are measured in profits, Sydney
Morning Herald, May 28 2003
.
2.http://bmj.com/cgi/content/full/326/7379/45
See: Moynihan, R., BMJ 2003;326:45-47 ( 4 January ).
3.http://www.scienceblog.com/community/article653.html
TGA Skeletons:
WHO Privatised the Regulator?
A three Part
Feature Article on who was behind the world’s largest recall. Filed May 12, 2003
By Eve Hillary
Part
1<
April
29th, 2003 was a cool autumn day in Australia.
To the average Aussie it seemed a day like any other. Most tuned
into the 6 o’clock news, aware that history was being made in other
countries with SARS and the U.S. invasion of Iraq.
But few were aware that something of historical importance was
unfolding in the “Lucky Country”.
To seasoned observers who saw it coming it was nothing short of
breathtaking when the near mortal blow to health freedom was finally
struck, and for a while, dissenting voices were stunned into silence. Many
pundits expected other countries to be the more likely targets but like
any interesting social experiment, there was an elegant logic behind the
choice. Australians were historically spared the great upheavals of the
twentieth century. They seemed more trusting, less suspicious of political
and corporate agendas than their counterparts in the northern hemisphere
or in Europe where entire populations still recall the spin-doctoring of
totalitarian governments under the guise of this or that benefit for the
public good.
The
largest, quickest and most comprehensive recall of health care products in
world history occurred in Australia following an announcement on Monday
April 29th by the TGA that they had served Pan Pharmaceuticals
with an order to suspend its operations for a six month period. The
company supplied 75% of Australia’s complementary healthcare products
such as nutritional supplements in the form of vitamins, minerals, omega
oils, and herbal products. Pan
also supplied a range of over-the-counter and other drugs, which were sold
under various brand names by other companies.
Jim Selim, the founder and CEO of Pan is an Egyptian born
pharmacist who by all accounts has a passionate belief in natural products
and expert knowledge of herbs and supplements.
Selim had single handedly built up his company and within 20 years
was the largest supplier of complementary health products in Australia.
His astonishing success catapulted him onto the world stage as the fourth
largest manufacturer of natural health products. Along with this
distinction came some unwanted attention from the multi-national
pharmaceutical industry, which had been lobbying against natural health
supplements and products because of the significant erosion they made into
drug company profits.
Studies show that
60% of consumers have spent some of their health dollars on supplements
and natural remedies. Many
use natural products to maintain good health or facilitate recovery from
various conditions after orthodox medicine has failed, as it often does in
the case of chronic illness. Doctors trained in nutritional medicine as
well as qualified naturopaths, use supplements therapeutically as an
adjunct to orthodox treatments or as wholistic treatments. The science
behind natural medicine has been widely denied by orthodox medicine and is
largely kept out of medical student’s curricula.
However nutrients have been used and studied for thousands of years
and there is a large body of valid scientific evidence that shows
therapeutic nutrients are highly effective in treating a wide range of
conditions. Most health consumers take supplements because they perceive a
health benefit and are not even aware that there is solid science behind
nutritional therapies. This research is little mentioned in the media,
which nearly always portrays nutritional therapies as being solely
practiced by unqualified quacks. Media
disinformation is issued directly from pharmaceutical company public
relations departments on a daily basis through journalists and
industry-sponsored doctors embedded in the media and other key positions.
(8) This has been occurring for over 40 years and is well documented in
the chemical industry archives, documents released through litigation. (7)
Much of the public
confusion on the issue results from drug industry misinformation, which
frequently refers to nutrient supplements as medicines or even drugs.
Nutrients are not drugs. Humans require dozens of essential
nutrients such as vitamins and minerals and antioxidants to stay alive and
healthy. The body knows how to use these and eliminates the excess as it
has done for millions of years. The need for supplements has increased
recently, after it has been shown that plant-based foods are now grown on
barren and demineralised soils, which do not supply plants with optimum
nutrients. Humans then eat nutritionally deficient plants.
Orthodox doctors claim the standard western diet contains all we
need and additional supplements are ‘flushed down the toilet’. This
view appears to be myopic or at least poorly informed, given that 75% of
all Australian deaths are a result of lifestyle factors.
This includes poor diet and the resulting nutritional deficiencies.
On the other hand,
drugs are mostly synthetic chemicals. There are many drugs that are life saving and beneficial when
prescribed responsibly. But
the massive proliferation of drugs has given rise to a statistic, which
the multi-national pharmaceutical industry attempts to hide. Dangerous or
inappropriate pharmaceutical drug treatments and medical interventions
have now become the third leading cause of death.
The “problem”
for the pharmaceutical industry is twofold. Healthy people avoid consuming
pharmaceuticals. Illness generates profits to drug companies, mainly
through their exclusive sale of patented drugs. Wellness and preventative medicine has been less profitable
for the multinational drug industry because smaller companies like Pan and
many other vitamin companies formulate and sell most of the world’s
nutritional and vitamin products. Nutrients and herbs are naturally
occurring substances and therefore cannot be patented unless their
structure is changed through genetic engineering or chemical processes.
Pharmaceutical industry PR departments and industry-funded scientists have
been behind unnecessary herb and vitamin scares, citing lack of uniformity
or actual danger to persons who take supplements.
Subsequently some natural products have been withdrawn from sale
while massive drug and biotech multi-nationals work behind the scenes to
chemically alter and patent natural substances as pharmaceuticals.
In Australia alone the increasing popularity of natural products
has deprived the global pharmaceutical market of 2 billion dollars
annually. This has brought in its wake an accelerating clampdown on
complementary medicine (using natural products). The drug industry is
worth trillions of dollars worldwide and it has some powerful friends.
In January 2003,
the TGA moved to recall Travacalm, Pan’s over-the-counter travel
sickness tablet when it was tested and found to be defective. After the
January recall, Pan discovered a problem with one of its analysts whom the
company claimed was responsible for the lapse in quality control over the
defective product. The
company dismissed the analyst, and set out to correct the problem with its
recalled product, while continuing to manufacture its other unaffected
product lines. So far the protocol followed normal procedure for a recall,
a commonplace occurrence even in the multi-national pharmaceutical
industry.
However, neither
Jim Selim nor Pan’s board members anticipated the special attention they
were about to receive from the TGA. The company had become used to the
regular TGA inspections in the previous few years and neither Pan nor the
TGA found any serious cause for concern. In fact, Pan’s vitamin and herb
factory had been inspected more often and more rigorously than the
Australian-based operations of multi-national pharmaceutical drug
companies. However, after January the TGA conducted a number of audit
raids on Pan which foreshadowed trouble.
In April, the TGA shut down Pan’s entire operation and slapped a
class 1 recall over 1369 Pan products which were unrelated to Travacalm.
This involved mostly vitamins, minerals and herbal products, which
the company supplied to over 75% of the complementary health care market.
The regulator cited serious concerns as to the quality, safety or
effectiveness of these natural remedies. Class 1 recalls are only issued
when it has been shown that the product is likely to cause serious,
irreversible health damage or death. By its extreme action of issuing a
class 1 recall, the TGA indicated to the general public that the calcium
tablet or vitamin C or Echinacea or chamomile or any other of the 1369
natural products they had been taking without any problems, are now
expected to cause death or irreversible health damage. Many consumers
questioned this logic when they had experienced no adverse health effects
from the supplements they had already taken. Those whose suspicions were
aroused were even more surprised that the TGA had not given specific
information about the nature of the problem with the products. Then Mayne
Health, a large health care company whom Pan supplied with health care
products, stated that their company had regularly conducted their own
rigorous testing of Pan’s product and had not found a cause for concern.
The TGA offered no explanation as to why an independent distributor of
Pan’s products could find no problem on testing when the regulator
claimed there was a life-threatening problem.
During the week of
the shock announcement, the TGA left its responsibilities as a provider of
accurate and useful public information, to the daily tabloids who rushed
to fill the information vacuum with headlines such as; Honeymoon Ruined,
Babies in Danger, It’s a Sick Business, Bad Medicine.
By the end of the week the TGA had still not explained the specific
problem and which of the vitamin company’s products were affected and in
what way. Instead they stood by as the press had a field day whipping
up the story while the more vulnerable consumers of health care products,
elderly people and young mothers, panicked and imagined all types of
horrific scenarios. The
interim week saw a run on 5000 health food stores which reported an influx
of panicked customers demanding refunds for all manner of products, even
those they’d fully consumed, and those that were out of date.
Some demanded money for taxi fares. The TGA remained tight lipped
about the offending substance that had allegedly rendered these
supplements life threatening overnight. Instead, the regulator issued
numerous public announcements stating that; “drugs and pharmaceuticals
are perfectly safe and persons should keep on taking them”. The NSW
State Premier chimed in with his own message to that effect.
By the end of the
week the dailies continued running weekend feature stories about the grave
dangers of taking vitamins. The
conundrum sent freelance and independent researchers scurrying to their
computers to research product recalls.
A short search of the FDA drug recall list and medico-legal
websites, list thousands of recalls, adverse events and warnings
pertaining to drug and chemical products manufactured by multi-national
drug and chemical companies. Many
of the listed products are known to be either dangerous or toxic to humans
and even carcinogenic. Multi-national drug company recalls are rarely
given much press, and have never been given as much negative media
attention as Pan had received. Even
more incredibly, no large multi-national company has ever been shut down
by a government regulator after one of its products has been recalled,
even if deaths have occurred as a result of using the drug or chemical.
This discovery was guaranteed to make any independent journalist
even more curious about the TGA and the vitamin company.
In the second week,
Pan stocks plummeted and other companies scrambled to fill the
manufacturing gap while their share prices surfed a rising wave. The
mainstream media had settled into the role of investigators and de-facto
TGA spokespersons, breathlessly informing the public of the “facts”
behind the “vitamin scandal”.
“Snake Oil Jim Quits..” screamed the tabloids, while the
“prestigious” Sydney Morning Herald ran the story; “Tangled Tale of
Lucky Jim”, a vicious little expose` of
Selim’s daughter and her 1997 battle with drugs. Any parent would
consider it a tragedy to watch their child suffer from the disease of
addiction, let alone have it published in the newspaper. The journalists
Mercer and Stevenson used a psychologist’s report to speculate on Jim
Selim’s shortcomings as a parent. Hardly a need-to-know issue for the
Australian public who had still not been informed as to the results of the
regulator’s testing of the 1369 urgently recalled products.
Not surprisingly, Jim Selim voluntarily resigned as CEO from his
own company, amidst one of the most vicious tabloid vilification campaigns
in the history of the Australian press.
While grannies
thought they had been poisoned, Australia’s investigative journalists
wrote about interviews with disgruntled employees who thought they should
have had longer breaks and the production should have been slower at the
vitamin factory. The dailies stated opinion as gospel while offering no
real facts from the TGA. While the thinking public waited for the facts,
young mothers still thought they had poisoned their babies. The tabloids
made fun of Jim Selim and columnists wrote ditties about vitamins and
herbs being “eye of newt”. Embedded
industry-sponsored TV journalists worked feverishly behind the scenes to
spin horror exposés about herbs and vitamins that were screened within a
week of the breaking news. And still no one had suffered any adverse
effects from having taken vitamins. Embedded “experts” emerged from
the closet with their editorials, published under the guise of objective
articles. Still the TGA
remained silent about the exact reason why the natural products were
classed as being capable of causing death. Pundits assumed TGA was
checking all recalled products just as they had checked Travacalm and made
public the exact nature of the problem.
By the end of the
week Jim Selim, once a man with a zest for life, had been forced to leave
his home after journalists crawled all over his garden by day and night.
They interviewed his neighbours, one of whom complained that the Selim
family had visitors who banged the gate when they left. The other
complaint was about the noise when the family swam in their pool. The facts gleaned by the reader from this in-depth
investigative journalism were that the Selims had friends and they
indulged in occasional exercise. By week’s end the Selim family
retreated to parts unknown, amidst Jim’s friend’s concerns that “he
is in a very bad way.”
While the media was
beating itself to death with the vitamin factory story, a little known
posting appeared in an obscure place on the TGA website.
The regulator is also in charge of being a public watchdog with
respect to food, chemicals and consumer items.
On the same day as the TGA recalled Pan products, they also issued
another recall. A smallgoods
company packaged a large quantity of ham, which was found to be
contaminated with bacteria known to cause serious food poisoning, which
sometimes results in death. The
media never mentioned this, and there were no public press releases issued
by the TGA.
At the end of the
second week following the world’s largest recall, the TGA had still
released no results of their product testing to Australian consumers or
the thousands of businesses that relied on accurate information.
But many of the 5000 or so Australian health food store proprietors
were about to start the cascade into insolvency. To hasten the process,
they were forced by the consumer watchdog ACCC to issue consumer refunds
when they had no guarantee of reimbursement by the now ailing
manufacturer. Health food shops were left saddled with the difference
between the wholesale and retail price, which they had to find out of
their own pockets. With their
backs to the wall they still had precious little by way of an explanation.
However, TGA did issue clear instructions to clear shelves of
recalled product. Now,
virtually overnight natural products disappeared leaving many shops bare.
The largest
mountain of vitamins, minerals, oils and herbs in the world was hurriedly
designated for destruction by the Australian Government in a special
location and using a special process usually reserved for toxic waste.
The evidence is destined for destruction.
The TGA has still not informed the public as to why their natural
products were classified as being deadly, when no one had previously
suffered adverse effects. The regulator has released no test results.
It is not known if tests were ever conducted. When the mountain of
vitamins finally rests in its mass grave, incinerated and entombed as the
remains of what the Australian government regards as toxic waste, we will
never know. And the epitaph on the headstone could well read; “Here Lies
Health Freedom”.
Among the mystery
and intrigue surrounding this historical event, one thing appears to be
certain. Had any test shown a lethal toxicity supporting a class 1 recall,
the TGA would have told us by now.
Unlike some issues
that rest in peace, the ghost of this recall will haunt the government for
years to come. The story of
the recall started years ago in a bustling European city.
But first, a little more about the regulator.
Part 2
: TGA “Protecting the Health and Safety of All Australians”
Like its US FDA
counterpart, the Australian TGA states that it “is obligated to take
action where there is concern in relation to the quality, safety and
effectiveness of medicines.” The
regulator also oversees the safety of food and chemical products as well
as consumer items and medicines. The TGA states its role is to
“…protect the health and safety of all Australians.”
However, an audit of the regulator’s performance reveals an
astonishing picture.
TGA Regulating Chemicals
In 1999 a woman
lodged a complaint with the TGA about a chemical product that she had
used, as directed on the label. Using this product had caused her to be
violently ill and she required hospital treatment. She was pregnant at the time of the toxic exposure.
Serious health effects became apparent as a result of the
poisoning, affecting both the woman and her child for many years.
Both were subsequently diagnosed with chemical poisoning by two
Australian doctors and one U.S. specialist physician. She reported this to
the then director of the Chemicals and Non-prescription Medicines Branch
of the TGA, Mr. Graham Peachey. The
director replied to her complaint, claiming that all chemicals are
rigorously tested and regulated by Australian government departments. He
maintained that her claim that this chemical product had caused serious
illness was a result of “a
strong interaction with personal belief factors”. By this, he dismissed
her complaint, alleging that she was imagining the (medically diagnosed)
serious effects the chemical exposure had on herself and her child. The
woman wrote back enquiring as to what kind of testing is done by the
regulators on toxic chemicals that are manufactured by large
multi-national companies and that stream directly onto the Australian
market. She received no reply. She later found out that no independent
testing of any kind is done on these products before they reach the
consumer. Meanwhile she encountered others who’d had similar experiences
with the same chemical and other toxic consumer products.
She discovered that they too had written letters of complaint to
the TGA, and they had received the same response. She joined a support
group for chemically injured persons, and became the group’s newsletter
editor. Soon she was inundated with letters from persons who related the
identical or similar responses from the TGA after they had lodged
complaints to the regulator about harmful effects from toxic chemicals in
consumer products. Intrigued,
she investigated these allegations and found that the TGA had dismissed
all of them. None of these dozens (and possibly thousands) of complaints
alleging serious and sometimes life threatening effects on consumers by
various chemical products were ever investigated by the TGA. The
multi-national chemical manufacturers were never held accountable and the
TGA never co-operated with calls to start an adverse events register for
chemical products despite years of lobbying by individuals, advocates and
support groups.
TGA Regulating
Drugs
Like its U.S. FDA
counterpart, the TGA regulates and approves drugs. Ten years ago in 1994
there were 157.5 million prescriptions issued annually. That figure has
now increased exponentially as hundreds of new drugs have come on line. It
would be reasonable to assume that a large part of the huge modern TGA
building in Canberra would be devoted to ensuring public safety through
monitoring of potent pharmaceutical drugs. However more oversight
committees and manpower is devoted to herbs and vitamins. Why? A quick
overview of just one drug regulating example will yield some disturbing
answers and raise even more questions.
In the mid 1980’s
GlaxoSmithKline marketed buproprion as an antidepressant, released under
the brand name of Wellbutrin and later Zyban. In 1986 bupropion was
briefly withdrawn due to the high rate of convulsions associated with its
use, and later inexplicably returned to the marketplace. By 2002 bupropion
was recognised as the third most common cause of drug related seizures
with cocaine found to be the number one cause (2).
Buproprion is often placed in the same category as Prozac type
drugs, but its exact mode of action remains unclear after many years of
study. Since 1998,
statistics indicated some serious adverse effects were occurring among
patients taking the drug. Complaints were flowing in to Health Canada, to
the UK regulator and to the manufacturer, GlaxoSmithKline.
The company had received 1127 adverse reports about the drug from
Canada alone between May 1998 and May 28, 2001. This included 19 deaths.
Meanwhile the Medicines Control Agency, UK’s version of the FDA/TGA,
reported 3,457 adverse reaction reports to the drug including 18 deaths. Since then there have been 7,500 adverse reactions and
58 deaths in the UK up to April 2002.
In 2000,
GlaxoSmithKline lodged an application to the TGA to approve bupropion, to
be marketed in its new guise, not as an antidepressant, but as an anti
smoking drug called Zyban. By
then the drug had collected a number of skeletons in its closet. The drug
had enjoyed another life as a weight loss pill, and was written up in an
Obesity Journal as being a fat buster, since loss of appetite had been
determined in 3% of the side effects reported while in use as an
antidepressant. However, the “research” was far from ethical, as it was
commissioned and paid for by the drug’s manufacturer. (3,4)
Shortly after the pharmaceutical giant lodged its drug application
to the TGA in Canberra the regulator commenced its stringent “pre-market
evaluation” of bupropion, now known as Zyban. The registration process
involved an in depth assessment of the drug, its efficacy, and safety.
The regulator was required to review the adverse effects including
convulsions and death associated with the drug’s use overseas, figures
that were by then readily available.
While the TGA was still busy “protecting the health and safety of
all Australians” with its rigorous safety assessment of the drug, the
global death toll was still escalating. By mid 2002 the manufacturer had
already received reports of 245 deaths associated with the use of this
drug. (5)
After the TGA
experts finished their stringent review of bupropion, now marketed Zyban,
the drug enjoyed the approval of the Australian regulator.
It was introduced into Australia late in 2000, and extensively
promoted to doctors as an anti smoking drug (1).
The Australian
Zyban experience proved to be tragically identical to the reported
overseas experience. Not long
after TGA approved its use in Australia serious reports of adverse
reactions started to pour into the TGA’s adverse drug reactions advisory
committee ADRAC. Since
Zyban’s approval, 1237 reports of adverse reactions linked to Zyban,
have been reported to the TGA, including: 74 episodes of
convulsions/twitching, psychiatric effects such as depression and anxiety,
serious skin rashes including a serum sickness type syndrome, impotence,
chest pain. And 18
Australians died. (1)
When complaints
came into the adverse drug advisory committee about Pan’s Travacalm
after persons experienced sedative and other side effects from the
product, the TGA perhaps understandably applied a class 1 recall, even
though there were no irreversible effects or deaths. (Class 2 recall is in
case of adverse events that are reversible or mild, and class 3 recalls
are reserved when no serious adverse events are expected to occur)
Oddly the vitamins included in this recent haul attracted a Class 1
recall when no effects at all had been reported.
However, despite
the high numbers of adverse events and deaths, the TGA has no serious
concerns about the safety of Zyban. To protect the health and safety of
all Australians the regulator will review “each report with a fatal
outcome” through its ADRAC (adverse drug reactions advisory committee),
which meets every six to seven weeks and “is keeping the drug’s safety
under close review.” The
committee’s experts are not certain as to whether the deaths and serious
side effects are caused by the drug or are “coincidental.” (1)
While the TGA is
still “reviewing” and “monitoring” the ever-increasing death toll
linked to an apparently dangerous drug, it has acted immediately to affect
a class 1 recall of a calcium supplement, which it recalls “Due to
serious concerns”. Calcium is a naturally occurring mineral that is
required for good health on a daily basis, and no one has ever died from
it. Closely followed by a class 1 recall of 1369 other natural
supplements.
The regulator has
no plans to withdraw Zyban from the Australian market. It is not the only
dangerous drug widely prescribed and approved by the TGA. 10,000 fatal
events occur annually in Australia, attributed to medical procedures and
drug associated deaths. Most of these deaths could have been avoided if
the regulator recalled the drugs that caused deaths and left the vitamins
and nutrients essential to life available to the public.
The disturbing
questions raised by this paradox must now be answered.
Part 3
: WHO owns the TGA?
Each year delegates
gather in a European city to convene the Codex Alimentarius Commission.
The first commission was convened in 1963 as a joint effort between the UN
and the WHO (world health organization). Since that time the Codex delegates have overwhelmingly
represented large multi national pharmaceutical companies and government
regulating authorities including the FDA and TGA. The delegates are
determining an eight-step guideline that is already being implemented in
many countries of the world. The Codex guidelines are intended to prevent
the further sale of supplements and herbs and to regulate them as drugs to
be manufactured solely by drug companies.
In accord with the Codex guidelines, supplements are being slowly
withdrawn from the public domain.
There are no
representatives of small vitamin manufacturers and retailers at Codex
meetings and health supplement consumers are not represented, as they are
not eligible to attend. There is no press allowed during these meetings.
Each successive meeting at the Codex commission advances the coming
agenda to set worldwide guidelines on vitamins, supplements and herbs. The
full restriction of supplements and herbs is enacted as an eight-step
process and begins with seemingly innocent changes that the regulator
adopts at first. Finally each country is brought closer to full
harmonisation when the consumer can no longer access supplements or herbs.
The guidelines
include the setting of recommended daily intake (RDI) levels of
supplements, which are set so low as to make therapeutic doses or
prophylactic doses of supplements impossible and technically illegal.
Iceland, Sweden, Norway and Denmark have already harmonised to step 5.
Once harmonised, the codex ‘recommendation’ becomes enshrined in that
country’s statutes and laws are strictly observed. One Scandinavian
vitamin supplier was chased by the federal police for supplying vitamin C
tablets that exceeded 200 mg. The
amount of vitamin C contained in three oranges had made this man a
criminal. Canada has
recently harmonised with Codex, with its regulator withdrawing nearly half
of the stocks in health food stores overnight.
Possession of one popular supplement DHEA in Canada now attracts
the same penalties as crack cocaine. The Canadian regulator is empowered
to classify any substance as a drug and it makes no difference if that
substance is a food that has been consumed for millions of years and is
perfectly safe. That product can be recalled or removed from the market.
As Codex continues
its march, herbs are increasingly classed as drugs with restricted access.
Germany has already complied fully by regulating all supplements and herbs
as drugs. In a country with an age-old tradition of natural medicine, no
one can freely access these products now. This is designed to assist drug
companies in their technology of PharmaPrinting, which produces versions
of herbs that will be standardised and patented by drug companies and
approved by government regulators as drugs. In a press release six years
ago, the WHO has announced its collaboration with PharmaPrint, a
California based Biotech Company, which has already started to standardise
useful herbs such as Gingko, St. John’s Wart, Valerian and many others.
(9)
Once patented,
useful Herbs will then be banned and removed from the public domain, even
for garden use. There has
already been a Federal police raid carried out on a couple in northern NSW
who planted a Chinese herb in their garden to use as tea. (10)
For the time being,
all herbs and supplements have now been allocated DIN (drug identification
numbers) which many regulators have now adopted and implemented in their
respective countries as they gradually harmonise with the codex
“recommendations”. Australian TGA officials have distributed much of
this DIN software to other countries. The TGA is in the process of
pressuring New Zealand to adopt similar restrictive standards as are
currently in Australia. Graham
Peachey, the one time director of the chemicals and non-prescription
medicines branch of the TGA has taken over the task of persuading NZ to
harmonise to the same level as Australia. That includes the prohibition of
any therapeutic claim made with respect to nutritional supplements, even
if there exist medical studies to support those claims.
So far NZ has resisted moves in that direction, placing value on
health freedom for its citizens. However,
failure to implement these Codex standards will result in sanctions
against governments by the WTO.
There is a fortune
to be made by multinational drug companies solely controlling the
manufacture and sale of all life sustaining natural products.
Many doctors and health freedom advocates are deeply disturbed by
these events. Dr. Matthias
Rath, a medical specialist in nutritional medicine demonstrated that
nutritional supplements reversed many conditions including heart disease.
He states. “If the Codex Commission is allowed to obstruct the
eradication of heart disease by restricting access to nutritional
supplements, more than 12 million people world-wide will continue to die
every year from premature heart attacks and strokes.
Within the next generation alone, this would result in over 300
million premature deaths, more than in all the wars of mankind
together.”
Codex has been a
well-kept secret for many years. However, lately word has spread and
thousands of health conscious and informed people are protesting against
the disappearance of health freedom.
People are demanding their right to stay healthy in open
demonstrations around the world. For
countries that have already harmonised, it is too late to reverse this
blow to health freedom in the near future. However, greater awareness is
gathering strength globally and those with agendas are running out of time
to implement their total control over God’s garden and over the citizens
of those countries that haven’t yet fully harmonised.
Back to Pan
It seems an
extraordinary stroke of luck for the TGA that half the supplement stocks
have been swept away into a toxic waste incinerator while the media
manufactures public consent for the regulator to clamp down on the vitamin
industry with tighter controls. “Clean
up the industry” the public demands.
“Standardise herbs”. “Tighten
up the regulations”, demand those who know nothing of the global agenda,
and the same cry is heard from those who know the plan. Many senior TGA officials have deep ties to WHO.
News of Pan travels fast. It was posted in Geneva the day after it
was announced to Australians.
We would be well
advised to watch the developments from now on. And to speak up while we
still can. We are
nearing midnight, just a few short steps away from “harmonising” with
the needs of a very powerful cadre of individuals.
It was Benito Mussolini who said, “Fascism should more
appropriately be called corporatism because it is a merger of state and
corporate power. “
In the lucky
country people still believe Benito lived a long time ago in a land far
away.
The author asserts
copyright, but this article may be distributed for non-commercial
purposes. For any other purpose please contact the author at; evehillary@smartchat.net.au
About Eve
Hillary
Eve
Hillary is based in Sydney. She
a medical writer and researcher into issues pertaining to the health care
industry and environmental health. She
specializes in documenting the human impact of the politics of
multinational medical and biotech corporations, covering issues such as
emerging epidemics, gene pollution, chemical pollution, government
regulators and the role of the media.
She
is the author of Children of a Toxic Harvest: An Environmental
Autobiography, and numerous articles relating to environmental health
issues. Her most recent book is Health Betrayal; Staying away from the
sickness industry. She is also a public speaker.
Eve
has spent 25 years in health care where she has observed the medical
industry at first hand from the inside.
Knowledge
is power, and Eve’s primary objective is to return this power to the
individuals whose lives depend on it.
She uncompromisingly believes that knowing the facts about health
care is a right that belongs to the public.
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