REMEDIES CAN CAUSE DEATH
Homeopathic remedies can harm beyond imagination if abused. It can cause death if over used. Refer "Expanded work of Dr. E.B.Nash" Preface page number xvii. It states that --The drug capable of curing, misapplied may kill instead of curing.
At the same time, Single remedy system of Homeopathy is the law of cure and it is the only system in the world to remove the infection/casue of the disease and offer disease free life. It can cure cancer, kidney disease, diabetes and almost all diseases. But we need to follow the law of cure, which is a very difficult task.
That means it is up to us to learn and use it for cure.
Let us see the latest FDA report---
It hasn't been a great year for advocates of homeopathy – a pseudoscience that has been practiced for over 200 years. Following on from authorities in the European Union, United Kingdom and Australia cracking down on homeopathic treatments, the FDA is proposing a new "risk-based enforcement approach" promising greater scrutiny of the massive US$3-billion-dollar industry.
While homeopathic drugs should be regulated in the same way as any other drug, the FDA created a special dispensation in 1988 allowing homeopathic drugs to be distributed in the US without regular approval. As times changed so did alternative medicine markets, and the recent FDA announcement now recognizes that what may have been a small fringe community 30 years ago, is now a major billion-dollar industry, and greater oversight could be necessary.
"In recent years, we've seen a large uptick in products labeled as homeopathic that are being marketed for a wide array of diseases and conditions, from the common cold to cancer," says FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb. "In many cases, people may be placing their trust and money in therapies that may bring little to no benefit in combating serious ailments, or worse – that may cause significant and even irreparable harm because the products are poorly manufactured, or contain active ingredients that aren't adequately tested or disclosed to patients."
The announcement is most certainly spurred on by the discovery in late 2016 of dangerous levels of a toxic substance called belladonna in a brand of homeopathic teething tablets. In the years leading up to this product's ultimate discontinuation there were over 400 adverse events reported and up to 10 deaths potentially related to this homeopathic remedy.
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is also turning its sights on homeopathy, announcing in late 2016 that any health-related claims made by a product must be backed up by scientific evidence. The FTC claims it will be increasing scrutiny into homeopathic marketing that doesn't clearly add the disclaimer that any health benefits, "are based only on theories of homeopathy from the 1700s that are not accepted by most modern medical experts."
Over the last 12 months, several regulatory bodies around the world have turned their focus on the field of homeopathy. In September, the European Academies Science Advisory Council (EASAC) released an expansive set of recommendations suggesting that public health bodies in the European Union should not reimburse homeopathic products.
EASAC cites numerous studies suggesting not only has homeopathy been effectively discredited time and time again, but that the field also presents dangers to patients by potentially delaying more robust and proven medical treatments. The advisory council sharply concluded its report quoting an influential study from 1998 on the risks of untested and unregulated medicines: "There cannot be two kinds of medicine – conventional and alternative. There is only medicine that has been adequately tested and medicine that has not …"
Both Australia and the United Kingdom also set out to scrap any public subsidies for homeopathic treatments in 2017. The chief executive of the National Health Service England described homeopathy as, "at best a placebo and a misuse of scarce NHS funds."
Despite 2017 at times feeling like a year where an anti-science sentiment was stridently taking hold, it is good to know that common sense can still prevail, and while those who choose to treat water as medicine are still entirely free to do so, it's reassuring that governments and public health bodies are not supporting the large-scale spread of misinformation.
I FULLY AGREE AND CONSIDER THE FDA REPORT TO BE CORRECT.
REMEMBER AND DO NOT FORGET---THE REMEDIES OFFER CURE ONLY IF USED CORRECTLY. THE MISUSE WILL HARM BEYOND YOUR IMAGINATION AND OVER USE WILL KILL.
REMEMBER AND DO NOT FORGET---THE REMEDIES OFFER CURE ONLY IF USED CORRECTLY. THE MISUSE WILL HARM BEYOND YOUR IMAGINATION AND OVER USE WILL KILL.
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ReplyDeleteSo far as I know, the FDA have not to this day categorically stated that the Hylands pills conclusively caused any fatalities. They persist in casting aspersions with the phrase "connected with" (no doubt milk was "connected", too). This is the "cum hoc ergo propter hoc" fallacy and would be torn down by skeptics if they were genuine - but more than that it is scientific and regulatory fraud to blame Hylands and insist on restricting trade with no firm evidence.
The news has been carefully managed to give a lasting but deceitful impression, fooling all manner of people.
Another aspect of this affair is that the FDA's sponsors in Pharma are enemies of homeopathy, as are the notoriously untruthful propagandist "skeptic" movement. Homeopathy presents successful and safe competition as it always has done; it disrupts pharma profits. It has been a thorn in their side (considering the enormous number of iatrogenic deaths on FAERS), that homeopathy has an unparallelled safety record over a century. They deeply wanted some how to show homeopathy was dangerous, even if they had to make it up and get away with it.
The great concern with this criminal enterprise is that children did die, and the cause has not been ascertained. It has only been lied about.
The reactions reported share aspects with several other medical possibilities which I need not enumerate, but in my view certainly could not have been caused by such low concentrations of belladonna as in the standard preparation, even allowing for variations.
It looks to me as if it is possible some pills were deliberately contaminated, in order to bring about death, in order to create a popular impression. There are certainly people who would do this (and skeptics have been caught in criminality before). They should have been found.
Remember and do not forget--The remedies offer cure only if used correctly. The misuse, overuse and abuse will harm beyond imagination and kill.
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ReplyDeleteHow we can believe it is true? Lots of false is all over the world.And many people's do marketing in this way. So so? I am not telling you such, but how can I believe in such a situation?
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