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Well, thank you for clarifying that. With all due respect to your g/f, I would not at all be impressed or reassured by a qualification from the "Southern School of Natural Medicine".
I elaborated on this point in my example of how easy it would be so set up an "Institute of Nutritional Wellness" or whatever you would like to call it.
Government regulation? In what form? How does this work and how does it provide protection for the consumer?
So can you be more clear about this? Most pharmaceutical reps will give doctors pads and pens e.g. and sponsor 'educational events' but I think you are misrepresenting the situation if you are actually suggesting doctors receive some tangible benefit if they prescribe a company's products.
Please clarify the 'quota' suggestion above : i.e. to whom does this apply?
Interesting that you do actually see a GP.
Um, the drug industry provides lots of incentives for Doctors to prescribe 'their' drugs. I have a friend who is a medical specialist who regularly takes off on Business Class trips to exotic locations for 'conferences'; all paid for by drug companies.It is in a GP's best interests to make his patients better. He doesn't get money from selling products. .
Most "alternative" therapies and some "traditional" therapies work via the placebo effect.
There may be some that have a placebo affect, but do you have evidence that proves that this is the case for "most"? Which alternative and traditional therapies are you referring to?
Prospector, your friend has the choice to refuse to accept this travel.Um, the drug industry provides lots of incentives for Doctors to prescribe 'their' drugs. I have a friend who is a medical specialist who regularly takes off on Business Class trips to exotic locations for 'conferences'; all paid for by drug companies.
No apology necessary, gav, but thank you.Hi Julia,
I apologise for assuming you did not believe there is corruption in the pharmaceutical industry. You would know a lot more about it than I, considering you worked in the industry so long. As for doctors receiving kickbacks for prescribing a particular type of drug or companies drug, I am only stating what I have been told by sales rep for a pharmaceuticals company. I have not personally witnessed this.
Gav,
I haven't had many prescriptions, but the ones I have had have been for a particular drug, not a particular brand of drug. When at the chemist I get to choose if I would like a "cheaper alternative" because I choose the brand, not the doctor.
I will however take your comments on board as I have no doubt there are some dodgy GP's out there.
Shouldn't the onus be the other way around? Alternative medicines should be able to prove that their treatments work, not skeptics prove that they don't.
If they were truly effective, why haven't they been incorporated into mainstream medicine? Let me guess, there's no patent on plants...
One of the simplest means of cleaning up a lot of what's currently not reported, he suggests, would be to have a complete Register of Clinical Trials (unbelievably something which doesn't currently exist), where all the details re method etc would have to be entered at the start, and the results recorded.
Presently anyone can simply discard an unsuccessful trial. So it's possible to have say six trials showing a drug/product does not work as anticipated, simply dump these, and present one trial which shows the product to be effective.
Well this thread has certainly been an eye opener, I'm glad I joined in
No one has commented on whether they do or would buy some of the 'natural' products which line the shelves of pharmacies and health food shops, also supermarkets. Anyone?
One of the few natural products that has actually been subjected to proper clinical trials is glucosamine. Following the unsuccessful use of vet prescribed products for a dodgy elbow joint in my dog, I've used this in combination with chondroitin very successfully.
Might be other similar natural products which work well?
Did you end up buying creatine?:
Gav, I don't think this is correct. All the TGA does, as far as I know (and Soft Dough may be able to comment further on this) is offer verification that the ingredients quoted on the label are in fact in the product. I understand this is ascertained via random audits.I totally agree, alternative medicines should be able to prove their treatments work. It is illegal to claim therapeutic value and not be TGA listed.
Well if it is in fact different here, I'd like to see the relevant legislation.It is worse in the USA, you can claim what you like when selling something. It isn't until the FDA investigate a product and deem that it does not meet claims that it is taken off the market.
What I mentioned was the advisability of a Register of all Clinical Trials so that ALL results have to be recorded publicly.It is not just alternative medicines that require regulation, the pharmaceutical/drug industry requires much tougher regulations, as Julia mentioned earlier...
Not as disgraceful as the fact that 'alternative' companies don't have to provide any proof of efficacy whatsoever!It is disgraceful that drug companies are allowed act in such a way.
Not as disgraceful as the fact that 'alternative' companies don't have to provide any proof of efficacy whatsoever!
At least drugs available to be prescribed have actually submitted data to the TGA re their efficacy, and it's then up to the TGA to approve them for prescription to the public.
I would be happy if the 'alternative' industry simply had to do the same.
The other possible negative for the drug companies is one that Sunder previously mentioned. You cannot patent a plant. Drug companies often isolate a constituent from a herb or plant and patent it. If that plant was proven to be effective at treating an ailment, then there would be no benefit for a drug company to put a patient on that constituent.
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