Topic: EU ban on vitamin supplements

Vitamin users in last-ditch bid to stop ban on supplements
By Geoffrey Lean and Steve Bloomfield

23 January 2005

Consumers and producers of popular vitamin and mineral supplements used by thousands every day will this week make a last-ditch attempt to prevent a European Union directive from banning them.

Campaigners claim products from well-known brands including Holland and Barrett, Solgar and Viridian will be removed from the shelves unless they are reformulated.

The campaign against the directive has enlisted the help of a number of high-profile supporters, including Cherie Blair's former lifestyle adviser Carole Caplin and the actress Jenny Seagrove. Dame Judi Dench and Bianca Jagger are also backing the campaign.

A third of women and a quarter of men take health food supplements in the UK and the market is thought to be worth at least  £350m a year.

The EU directive lists only 28 vitamins and minerals, and 112 sources from which they were derived for use in food supplements, which can be sold legally after it comes into force on 1 August. It would threaten up to 5,000 products, containing more than 200 nutrients, which campaigners claim have been used safely in specialist supplements for many years.

Some large chains, such as Boots, have already reformulated their products to meet the new EU rules and say their customers will see no difference when the directive comes into force. Also, manufacturers who submit detailed scientific dossiers by July this year that prove their ingredients are safe will still be allowed to sell their products.

Campaigners say the cost on suppliers could force smaller firms into bankruptcy. Few of the small health food companies can manage the expense - up to  £250,000 for each ingredient - and only a handful of safety dossiers are being prepared.

Consumers for Health Choice, who have been leading the campaign against the directive, said that products under threat include Solgar Prenatal Nutrients, which contain nutrient sources not on the EU's list, and Holland and Barrett's ABC Plus, which has a high dose of vitamin C.

A court case brought by the National Association of Health Stores and the British Health Foods Manufacturers Association will argue on Tuesday that Brussels is exceeding its powers by imposing a blanket ban. It is being contested by the EU's institutions and by the governments of Greece and Portugal as well as Britain.

On the same day, the Conservatives, who say the measure will outlaw virtually every popular multi-vitamin pill sold in the country, will call in the Commons for the ban to be scrapped.

Ministers are concerned that growing public opposition to the ban will affect the referendum on the European Constitution, due after the general election.

Peter Hain, the Leader of the House of Commons, has called it "unnecessary interference" by Brussels, and other ministers have privately expressed sympathy with the protesters. But the Government is still pressing ahead with the ban, and will defend it in the European Court case.

Some reports suggest that some products could cause problems in high doses, but a major body of research demonstrates that deficiencies in minerals and vitamins, levels of which are falling in modern diets, can cause heart disease, osteoporosis, cancer and other conditions.

A recent study published by the American Medical Association shows that taking some mineral and vitamin pills reduces the risk of contracting cancer and cardiovascular disease, and protects foetuses.

The ban, the first of a series of EU measures designed to outlaw a range of alternative medicines, is contained in the Food Supplements Directive, passed in 2002 to harmonise the trade in supplements between EU member states and after lobbying from the pharmaceutical industry.

Sue Croft, a spokeswoman for Consumers for Health Choice, said: "If this directive comes into force it will affect the lives of millions. To have these supplements removed and to put more strain on the NHS is nothing short of a crime. At the election we will be targeting those MPs who do not vote to stop this."

A spokeswoman for Boots, however, which has a third of the vitamin supplement market, said the company had been gradually reducing the level of vitamins and minerals in own-brand supplements in line with new safety levels.

"Consumers won't see a huge change," a spokeswoman said. "We fully support this EU directive."

Source

2 (edited by T-Ren 2005-01-25 13:47:30)

Re: EU ban on vitamin supplements

(T-Ren hangs and shakes his head).

Another area where we can still have some control in our lives being removed.
Sad, sad, very sad.

Peace,
Teddy

"It means the Matrix can't tell you who you are" - Trinity

Re: EU ban on vitamin supplements

Start stockpiling!   We're next!

"Life's journey is not to arrive at the grave safely in a well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, totally worn out, shouting "Holy shit ... what a ride!"  - Anonymous
-----
"I get by with a little help from my (higher density) friends."
-----

4 (edited by feritciva 2005-01-26 01:29:04)

Re: EU ban on vitamin supplements

That's more than sad for me. Because supplements/herbs are my profession. When you read the news about this, you always see lots of numbers: this percentage use, that million annual sale etc etc. Nobody's talking about the health benefits of the supplements. Nobody's talking on if supplements did some harm to people, where drugs kill thousands of people in every country. This tells me this whole ban thing is all pharmaceutical companies' work. They are used to see everything as sales/percentages/profits.

Did we talk about "control" in God's Gladiators thread?

F.C.

PS: Boots fully support EU directive?? Of course they do, they never had a good formulation! smile

Change we must, to live again
- Jon Anderson

Re: EU ban on vitamin supplements

I'm curious what kind of coverage this is getting in the mainstream media throughout Europe.  Any NR readers in the EU, I'd love to hear from you.

What especially bothers me about this kind particular issue is that once it's in effect, many will not notice.  There will still probably still be rows of supplements available on the shelves, but the actual content of the pills will be what's changed -- a subtlety working strongly in the industry's favor.

The whole concept of having to submit dossiers to the gov't in order to get nutritional supplements approved for sale is not only outrageous, but treasonous in any supposedly free society, where legislators are presumed to represent the interests of the people at large.  We are now entering the times when "that which is not specifically allowed, is forbidden."   This can no longer be explained away as stupid laws, or overzealous government: it's becoming serious oppression where the question of what actually consitutes slavery should be asked.  Is it just physical whips and chains, or are we approaching that state of affairs when people are not even free to choice what to consume for the sustenance of their own bodies?   Alex Jones is 100% on the money when he names his website "Prison Planet" to warn people of what's happening.  I realize these words may appear as a powerful reaction to a ban on supplements, but in my eyes the ban is merely a symptom of the much larger problem of the trend toward world totalitarianism with which most of the NR readers will be familiar. 

And I'm wondering, in the coming "bad times on Earth," where on the planet will there exist the greatest degree of safety and freedom to live one's life in peace?  I somehow think it will not be in the USA or western Europe.  I think it's a timely question which a lot of people may want to start to consider.  Perhaps somewhere in central or south America?  Rural Canada?  I don't know; I think this is a topic that no one has really found necessary to address yet.

Re: EU ban on vitamin supplements

The whole "CODEX" thing has been going on for  10 - 15 years or so. Canada and the US were making Legit attempts to pass it over here too with little press. I think the US stopped the push to wait and see how it finished in Europe first.

Canada may as well pass it since they have restricted so much already. Can't even buy Lysine for a canker sore.

Peace,
Teddy

"It means the Matrix can't tell you who you are" - Trinity

7 (edited by heandras 2005-01-26 06:18:12)

Re: EU ban on vitamin supplements

morningsun76 wrote:

I'm curious what kind of coverage this is getting in the mainstream media throughout Europe.

After having read your article I did some searches on the websites of major newspapers and did find nothing So I guess there is no mentioning of that thing on TV or in printed newspapers.

A man is born gentle and weak. At his death he is hard and stiff.
Green plants are tender and filled with sap. At their death they are withered and dry.
Therefore the stiff and unbending is the disciple of death. The gentle and yielding is the disciple of life.