Alternative Medicine Books : Acupuncture, Alternative Health, Energy Medicine, Homeopathy, Naturopathy and Vitamins

Alternative Medicine Books about dietary supplements


What about dietary supplements?

The FDA regulates dietary supplements as foods, and not as drugs. The FDA does not pre-approve dietary supplements on their safety and efficacy, unlike drugs. In contrast, the FDA can only go after dietary supplement manufacturers after they have put unsafe products on the market. However, certain foods (such as infant formula and medical foods) are deemed special nutritionals because they are consumed by highly vulnerable populations and are thus regulated more strictly than the majority of dietary supplements.

The claims that a dietary supplement makes are essential to its classification. If a dietary supplement claims in any way to cure, mitigate, or treat a disease, it would be considered to be a unauthorized new drug and in violation of the applicable regulations and statutes. As the FDA states it:

No, a product sold as a dietary supplement and promoted on its label or in labeling as a treatment, prevention or cure for a specific disease or condition would be considered an unapproved--and thus illegal--drug. To maintain the product's status as a dietary supplement, the label and labeling must be consistent with the provisions in the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act (DSHEA) of 1994.

The only claims that a dietary supplement is allowed to make are structure/function claims. These are broad claims that the product can support the structure or function of the body (e.g., "glucosamine helps support healthy joints"). The FDA must be notified of these claims within 30 days of their first use, and there is a requirement that these claims be substantiated. Nevertheless, many critics claim that dietary supplements overstate their importance and their impact on overall health. Evidence of their benefits has yet to meet standard scientific criteria of credibility, based on large scale, double blind testing with statistically significant outcomes.
(Nutrients for Neuropathy (The Numb Toes Series, Vol 3))

Nutrients for Neuropathy (The Numb Toes Series, Vol 3)

John A. Senneff

MedPress, 2002-07

Price: $19.95

Keywords: Alternative Medicine, Diets Weight Loss, Diets, Disorders Diseases, Health, Mind Body, Internal Medicine, Medical, Medicine, Nervous System, Neurology, Parenting Families, Supplements, Weight Loss, Weight Maintenance

Reviews:

Nutrients for Neuropathy
Some more usual information for neuropathy sufferers laid out in an easy to understand and follow format. This book in the series does not have so many other personal case histories as the other two publications and was not as useful to me.
EXCELLENT!
This book, gave me the knowlege to go to my Dr and tell him I was not going to take anymore perscriptions as no matter what i had been taking, including, neurontin, messed my brain up even though it might have helped with the pain. I noticed how so many said vitamin B was such a help and I am now using vitamins to combat my problem. Thank you for putting the book together and giving us hope that we are not alone in this fight within our own bodies. The Dr's comment with a smile was"Congratulations, you've graduated! You don't need to come back for six months"
SOOOOOOOOOO Good
A great book. A must for all who have neuropathy. Very Glad I bought it. Thanks Linda
Information for Peripheral Neuropathy Sufferers
This book has a good bit of info for those who suffer from Peripheral Neuropathy. I am glad I bought the book and every new bit of information helps me cope and feel some mastery over PN. Still, it was not organized quite as accessibly as I would have liked, and it suffers from the inevitable publishing-lag when compared to information straight from the Internet on current studies and thinking on PN.


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