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BYE BYE VITAMINS
"Codex
Alimentarius will be seen by future generations as the greatest threat
to the basic human right of health. Never before in history has a
special interest group, the pharmaceutical industry, so shamelessly
tried to compromise the health of millions of people in order to
maintain their billion dollar markets from prescription drugs."
Dr. Matthias
Rath, Physician, Author, Humanitarian.
Did you know
that the E.U. is banning certain nutritional supplements and ensuring
that others can only be bought through a doctors prescription? The
United States may soon have to comply with these ludicrous regulations
to ensure harmony of world trade at CODEX Alimentarius.

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WHY AMERICAN COMPANIES AND CONSUMERS
NEED TO ACT IMMEDIATELY TO SUPPORT THE ANH LAWSUIT
August 2003
Diverging
views on the EU Directives
Manufacturers,
suppliers, retailers, practitioners and consumers in Europe have
received a very wide range of sometimes conflicting messages about the
likely impact of the EU legislation (see Box 1 for summary). Information
filtering across the Atlantic is even more inconsistent. With so much
confusion, many companies are doing nothing.
Box 1: Summary of
key EU Directives
The reality is that
a clutch of EU legislation is making its way through the EU law-making
pipeline covering the full spectrum of dietary supplements, including
herbal products, so-called ‘borderline products’, fortified foods,
sports nutrition. In addition new EU regulations on health claims have
recently been proposed and these are more or less identical to those
just proposed in the US. For many it is the combined effect of all the
EU laws that is of greatest concern.
Fortunately, only
one directive has so far been passed in to EU law and EU member country
legislation, this being the Food Supplements Directive. There is
therefore still considerable scope to amend and shape the other
legislation, assuming European and international interests get behind
the appropriate campaigns.
One of the reasons
the Food Supplements Directive managed to scrape through the European
Parliament is that major international and European trade associations
advised their member companies that the directive was going to be
generally beneficial for the industry and they should plan ahead to
comply with it. In contrast, it has been consumer, retailer and
practitioner groups, especially in the UK, Sweden and Ireland, that have
consistently claimed that the legislation could be catastrophic for
particular sectors.
Since the
directive’s passage in to EU law, many of the leading companies and
associations with interests in the innovative sector of the European
dietary supplement industry have come together under the umbrella of the
pan-European and international Alliance for Natural Health (www.alliance-natural-health.org).
A detailed look at
the legislation suggests that the primary reason for discrepancies in
view over the Food Supplement Directive’s impact is the difference in
impact of the legislation on different sectors of the industry.
Innovator suppliers and those who are dependent on their products will
inevitably be hardest hit. Companies manufacturing or selling relatively
low-dose, synthetic vitamins and inorganic minerals will actually be set
to gain considerably from the legislation, benefiting from the single
market conditions across the 15 EU member countries (soon to be enlarged
to 25) set by the directive, its primary intended purpose.
But, for others, the
loss of many food-state vitamins (e.g. mixed tocopherols, tocotrienols,
natural carotenoids, methylcobalamin (a form of B12), a range of
minerals such as sulphur, boron, vanadium, silicon and many chelated or
plant-derived forms is of great concern. Since the Food Supplements
Directive is incremental in its effects, with even the bans on nutrient
forms not coming in to force until 1 August 2005, many detractors argue
that future effects could cumulatively have catastrophic impacts on
innovators, independent retailers and practitioners.
Food Supplements
Directive: key concerns
In summary there are
four primary concerns about the Food Supplements Directive. These are:
-
Limited range of nutrient forms allowed on the
‘positive list’ (Annex I & II of FSD). The UK Food Standard
Agency has determined that there are at least 270 ingredients
(nutrient forms) that are presently used in the UK that
are not included on the positive list. The National Association of
Health Stores has in fact determined that this is an understatement,
the real figure being in excess of 300 ingredients. These ‘missing’
ingredients are included in some 5000 products just on the UK
market. The Irish Association of Health Stores has determined that
around 85% of vitamin/mineral products in Irish health stores contain
one or more missing nutrient form and would require reformulation to
comply with the directive. One of the greatest concerns of the
Alliance for Natural Health (the leading pan-European group working to
positively shape the legislation) is that many of the missing forms
are food-forms that are more bio-available (and generally safer) than
the synthetic or inorganic forms included on the positive list.
-
Difficulties and costs in submission of dossiers
(Article 4.6) to allow derogated use of off-list nutrient
forms. The key issue here is that most supplement companies are in
fact formulation companies who buy in products from a limited number
of raw ingredient manufacturers or producers. If these manufacturers
choose not to put in dossiers, then the formulation company would not
be able to use it. However, if one manufacturer submits (and has
approved) a particular dossier, any formulator can use that ingredient
(at least until 31 December 2009). Costs for dossiers vary greatly
according to the amount and nature of existing data: but estimates
vary from ˆ20,000 to over ˆ300,000, depending on the ingredient. In
addition, because the time frames are limited (12 July 2005),
there may not be sufficient time to generate all the data for some
ingredients.
-
Reductions in Maximum Permitted Levels
via
unnecessarily low Upper Safe Levels (USLs), being developed by the SCF/EFSA
without a procedure that allows open consultation with outside
scientists or other experts. The Alliance for Natural Health Expert
Committee has determined that some of the science being used by the
SCF is flawed
and it appears that it is being used in order to justify very low
maximum levels of nutrients in food supplements (the consequence of
this is that higher levels will still be regarded as drugs and can
therefore only be administered by doctors as is currently the protocol
in many of the countries with less permissive legislative regimes) (Article
5).
-
Future restrictions on nutrients other than
vitamins and minerals as of 2007,
such as amino acids, fatty aids, phytonutrients, enzymes, fibre,
probiotics, etc. These restrictions could be brought in via a positive
list system (Recitals 6 & 8, Article 4.8).
It seems
that the intended purpose of the FSD is to protect the simplest,
low-dose, food supplements, of the type typically sold in European
supermarkets and pharmacies. The more specialist forms, particularly
those using food-form nutrients will only be able to remain on the
market after August 2005 if dossiers for their ingredients are submitted
and accepted, with all the contingent difficulties.
For many
companies there is simply not enough time to conduct the necessary
safety studies, given that there has never been any incentive or reason
to do this work for a large proportion of the food-form nutrients. For
others the task is too expensive. Take for example, selenomethionine,
the most common form of selenium found in foods and well known as a very
important antioxidant mineral: this form of selenium was rejected by the
European Food Safety Authority (EFSA, formerly the Scientific Committee
on Food [SCF]) in 1999 because long-term safety studies had not been
conducted. Instead, EFSA has allowed use of two inorganic forms of
selenium (sodium selenate and sodium selenite) that are both more toxic
and less beneficial as antioxidants. For many consumers this is very
confusing, as they hear on one hand that we should increase our
consumption of Brazil nuts which contain high doses of selenomethionine,
yet the EU Commission does not approve on its positive list use of this
safe form of selenium simply because the studies are not available. Are
food manufacturers being asked to provide safety data on natural
products? Who for, example, has been required to prove via clinical
trials that fruits and vegetables are safe?
Legal challenge of
the Food Supplements Directive
The ANH is
working with its scientific Expert Committee, outhouse lawyers, public
affairs and media specialists to either annul or positively shape key EU
legislation set to otherwise severely impact the innovative supplement
industry and its beneficiaries. Although there is plenty that can still
be achieved by effective lobbying on the amendments to the
Pharmaceuticals Directive and the Traditional Herbal Medicinal Products
Directive, and ANH is hard at work on this, options are far fewer for
the Food Supplements Directive.
There is still some
room to influence the maximum permitted levels and positive lists for
nutrient groups other than vitamins and minerals, but the directive has
already passed into European law and gets its full teeth once the
directive is implemented fully in EU member states 2 years after its
transposition in to their laws, in August 2005.
So, on behalf of
innovators and practitioners, the ANH is proposing to challenge the
validity of this directive later this year, and is working on this case
with its out-house lawyers who are among the most experienced European
lawyers in the EU.
Challenging the
directive would make no sense unless there were reasonable grounds and
probabilities of success. The ANH has retained the only legal team to
ever have overturned an EU Directive – and after a detailed examination
of the FSD, this team has given the ANH a green light to proceed (www.alliance-natural-health.org;
see Latest News, 8 August 2003). The case is being built on a number of
grounds, but of particular importance are EU constitutional grounds
which suggest that there is a real chance of annulling the directive.
In addition, it
appears that the effects of the directive can be challenged on grounds
of proportionality, based on the fact that that it will impact on
certain sectors of the industry, notably those associated with
innovative products, in a disproportionate manner. The challenge must be
mounted by the end of September of this year, so there is a huge amount
of work still to be done. Legal, scientific and commercial experts are
hard at work on the case already, since as a Judicial Review, the case
needs to be built with solid foundations before it is submitted.
Interestingly, if the directive is annulled, all national laws reliant
on the directive are likely to be invalid.
Dr Robert Verkerk,
Executive Director of the ANH, said, “the case will allow the real
science of nutrients to be showcased to the Commission, to the
Parliament and to the public generally. People will understand that
supplementation of a good diet with high quality nutrients is a valid
and effective way towards optimum health. There is no scientific
rationale for accepting synthetic vitamins and a limited range of
inorganic mineral forms while rejecting the plethora of naturally
occurring vitamins and minerals. Winning the case will pave the way to a
very bright future for the industry. We are not suggesting that there
should be no directive at all, but the existing directive needs to be
replaced with a re-worked version that allows for high quality,
effective supplements across the whole of Europe. It’s about harmonising
to good standards, not bad ones.”
It is now time for
all manufacturers, suppliers, retailers and practitioners who believe
their businesses are at risk to join the ANH campaign – and support the
legal challenge. Contact Henrietta Lee, the ANH Campaign Manager on
info@alliance-natural-health.org or phone + 44 1252 371 275 to find out
how you can join the campaign and be part of the ANH’s rapidly expanding
Support Base (see
www.alliance-natural-health.org). Support is needed NOW as the
timescales for the legal action are very tight.
The other Directives
The two
key EU directives that will regulate basic supplements will be the FSD
(but only those containing ingredients on the positive list or for which
dossiers have been approved) and the amended pharmaceutical directive
(PD) (Directive 2001/83/EC), of which the traditional herbal medicinal
products directive (THMPD) is a part. So if a product is not able to be
controlled under the FSD, it will default to the PD. If it falls under
the PD, it will either require a full drug license (with the very
substantial data requirements and costs required for drug approvals) or,
if appropriate, botanically-based products can be classified as
‘medicinal herbs’ and benefit from a ‘fast-track’ licensing scheme. This
‘fast-track’ THMPD procedure requires that the applicant can demonstrate
30 years safe, traditional use is used in lieu of safety data (the major
component of data required for market authorization as a drug).
The THMPD
is passing through the European regulatory process now and one
particularly contentious issue is the requirement in the EU Commission’s
proposed legislation for 15 years EU use, out of the total 30 years
traditional use. The Alliance for Natural Health, along with several
other organisations have tabled amendments and are campaigning to allow
30 years demonstrated safe use form anywhere in the world. They argue
that limiting non-EU use will prevent interesting and beneficial herbs
discovered in parts of the world with very strong herbal cultures (e.g.
China, India, South East Asia, South Africa, South America) from being
brought in to Europe and it will therefore strongly impact future
innovation. The legislation would essentially have the effect of
freeze-framing the industry in the early 1990s.
In
addition to this, further directives are being prepared by the EU
Commission on sports nutrition and fortified foods, and draft Health
Claims Regulations were tabled in Brussels in July of this year.
Conclusion
The US dietary
supplement industry has flourished in the face of what must be regarded
relatively as very liberal laws. There are clearly steps being taken by
the FDA and others to alter this, but it seems the industry together
with its huge consumer support base has so far defended itself very well
against unnecessarily restrictive legislation. The current US campaigns
against Durbin’s Bill S722 is a good example of how a diverse range of
interested parties can work together.
The US industry is
without question the world leader in this field, and there is growing
evidence that nutrients in dietary supplements may be used very
successfully in the prevention or even treatment of diseases.
Owing to the trends
towards global harmonization, and in particular increased pressure
towards trans-Atlantic harmonization, the EU Directives have a direct
influence on the shape of future US laws. In addition to this, many US companies have substantial and growing markets in
Europe, which will, following enlargement in two years time, have a
population of some 450 million people.
The Alliance for
Natural Health developed initially as a diverse range of largely
European interests who were not against legislation per se, but
were concerned about legislation that would potentially kill off
innovation in the future. It has now developed an increasingly strong
support base across Europe as well as in the US. The joint international
committee of the NNFA and AHPA in July unanimously put forward a motion
that supported the ANH’s legal action against the Food Supplements
Directive. Some have gone as far as suggesting that the EU Directives
are an even bigger threat to the US industry than the original proposal
for DSHEA which was positively amended in 1994 following huge protests
in Congress.
Time is of the
essence – and every company or individual with interests in the future
of the dietary supplement industry, both in Europe and the US, should
now very seriously consider whether they want to accept the Food
Supplements Directive, or be part of the potentially ground-breaking
challenge that could pave the way to a very bright future for the
industry.
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