Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Think you might want to know how the FDA approve drug…

I have been reading Dr. William Campbell Douglas’ newsletters for years. He has unique insight on our healthcare system that really opens my eyes and convert me into a confirmed natural health follower.  Anyway, I thought this issue that I got today need to have a wider audiance.  Don’t forget to sign up for his newslettler or subscrib his regular health newsletter for more education in natural ways to maintain your health.

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Daily Dose - Drugs lost in black hole

If you want to gamble your life away, be my guest - but don’t say I never warned you about the dangers of prescription drugs. Hundreds of thousands of people have kicked the bucket due to some adverse drug reaction or another, and countless more suffer from their side effects every single day.

If it’s that bad with drugs the FDA has approved, imagine the horrors that await people who take prescription drugs that haven’t received the FDA’s OK. If you’re thinking that it’s illegal for a doctor to prescribe a drug that hasn’t been approved by the FDA, you’re right. But that hasn’t cut down on the number of doctors who peddle unapproved drugs.

I don’t believe they’re deliberately deceptive, they’re just ignorant - or careless. Take your pick. Either way, you end up with the raw end of the deal: Taking prescription drugs that have never been proven to work on whatever your problem is - not to mention drugs that have never been proven to be safe (though a “safe” prescription drug is an oxymoron, anyway…).

Who knows? The prescription you just filled might be one of the more than 65 million prescriptions per year that are written for unapproved drugs. Of course, it would be hard to check if your prescription falls in that category or not, since the FDA refuses to release any kind of formal list of unapproved drugs to the public. After all, doing so would probably raise plenty of questions, not the least of which would be why they haven’t pulled unapproved drugs off the market.

I’ve never been one to give our government too much credit, but even I’m wondering how this level of ineptness is possible. One U.S. congressman chalks it up to a “black hole” in the approval system. When a new drug comes up for approval, it’s given a tracking number that the FDA uses to track it through the approval process. Pharmacies use that same number as an order number to stock their shelves. And there’s no rule that drug companies can’t fulfill orders until they have FDA approval.

Worse yet, there’s nothing in the tracking number that indicates whether the drug has been approved or not - which means that pharmacists are often just as in the dark as the doctors. In fact, a recent survey showed that 9 out of 10 pharmacists didn’t even know it was possible for them to dispense unapproved drugs.

But there’s another black hole that’s every bit as dangerous as drugs that slip unnoticed through the approval system.

Poisonous drug cocktails

Obviously taking one drug is risky enough - but taking a bunch of drugs at once is a gamble that I, for one, am not willing to take. It’s as reckless as playing chicken or Russian roulette, in my opinion. And almost everyone’s doing it. It starts with one drug for your cholesterol or high blood pressure. Then as each side effect pops up, another drug is added to deal with it. It’s whack-a-mole medicine, if you ask me. And it’s downright dangerous. I guarantee you it won’t be too long before the effects of the drugs will be far worse than the problems you were hoping to treat.

There’s no classification that lists polypharmacy (that’s the technical name for the poisonous cocktail of drugs) as a cause of death - and I’m sure Big Pharma is fighting to keep it that way. Because if more people knew the truth, business would be sure to take a nosedive.

Some estimate that polypharmacy is responsible for 28% of hospital admissions - and is the fifth leading cause of death in the United States. You don’t have to be popping 10 pills a day to fall into this category, either. Taking as few as two drugs can be all it takes to experience a negative interaction.

If you think you have no other choice than to stay on the drugs you’re taking, at least be smart about it. Keep a list of your meds and their doses. Show the list to your doctor when he’s prescribing you something - and to your pharmacist when you get the prescription filled. (Doctors don’t know everything, you know.)

And if you’re bound and determined to mix your own cocktail, stick with an occasional vodka martini - and leave the drug cocktails to the fruitcakes in the FDA.

To your good health,

William Campbell Douglass II, M.D.
For A Free Newsletter Subscription by Dr. Douglass

Posted by Jo Lee in 04:22:40 | Permalink | No Comments »

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

Backyard Chickens

I remember growing up in Hong Kong, my mother always had a flock of chickens kept in a coop on the rooftop of our four-story apartment building.  We always got sent in the neighborhood to go after a chicken who flew off when startled .  My father also kept pigeons as well on the same rooftop.  They also had a garden with planter and pots to grow many vegetables for the family. With the continued deterioration of our food production, many people in the United States are doing the same thing.  City dwellers are now raising chickens in their backyard.

I got pecked on the face by a rooster when I was 6. The scar is still there that after many years. So is the fond memories of those happy chickens and us kids chasing after them for fun. No wonder one of them retaliated. 

There are many online resources to learn how to do this in your own backyard. Not every city allows keeping chickens, some citizens successful have these restrictive rules overturned.

Nytimes.com, A chicken on every plot

http://backyardchickens.com/

The City Chicken.com

Posted by Jo Lee in 04:10:55 | Permalink | No Comments »

Monday, October 8, 2007

The Ways Our Ancestors Used to Farm are Illegal Today

Farmer Joel Salatin who runs a biodynamic farm in Virginia has a new book, Everything I Want to Do is Illegal. It is a must read for anyone who are interested in improving their health via diet.  The ways our ancestors producing, processing and distrubuting food are consider out-dated and out-rignt illegal today.  Our fatally flawed agricultural system is producing inferior foods with higher cost to our pocketbooks as well as the environment.  The only way we can create a world that will be good for us, we have to choose a different way to eat. That means have a different way to produce, process and distrubute food.

He wrote an artilce on the same subject for Acres USA magazine:

http://www.acresusa.com/toolbox/reprints/Salatin_Sept03.pdf

Posted by Jo Lee in 01:43:59 | Permalink | No Comments »