http://www.anhcampaign.org/news/anh-submits-two-petitions-european-parliament
ANH submits two petitions to the European Parliament
18th September 2008
Dear MEP
Food supplements and mobile phones: are their
respective risks to public health being managed proportionately?
Food supplements and mobile phones: are their
respective risks to public health being managed proportionately?
Most technologies with which humans interact are now heavily
influenced by risk assessment. Following the assessment, risks are
generally managed via regulation and communication strategies. The
alleged justification of all of this is to achieve a high level of
consumer protection. The recent changes in health and safety
requirements in many people's working environment and the ever-growing
attention to safety measures in motor vehicle design are just two areas
that readily spring to mind.
In some areas, the amount of regulation appears to be
disproportionate to the known risk, while in others, the lack of
concern for risk or the tolerance of risk because of an assumed benefit
derived from exposure to the source of risk, appears to expose the
public to substantial risk.
The raft of regulation emanating from Brussels and targeting
natural
health products is an example of the former, while the reliance by the
orthodox medical profession on pharmaceuticals is an example of the
latter. Pharmaceutical-based healthcare continues despite evidence that
mortality associated with the use of "properly prescribed" medicines is
the fourth biggest killer after heart disease, stroke and cancer (JAMA.
1998; 279(15): 1200-5). The situation is comparable elsewhere,
especially in the industrialised world. Another less well know example
relates to the public health risks of low intensity electromagnetic
fields (EMF) from cellular (mobile) phones and wireless devices.
This begs the question: is this tolerance or intolerance of
risk
really the result of a careful weighing up of risks and benefits to
public health? Or has it perhaps got more to do with the sheer gravity
of corporate influence on policy makers and regulators?
We urge you, as a Member of the European Parliament, to
consider
carefully two issues about which we have just submitted petitions to
the European Parliament Petitions Committee. These affect risk
assessment and management methodologies for vitamin and mineral food
supplements and sources of EMF respectively.
The first of these sectors is being pressurised to such an
extent,
that if regulatory initiatives, particularly in Europe, are not
altered, the maximum amounts of vitamins and minerals allowed in food
supplements will be lower than those found in a single junk food meal.
To give you just one example, European citizens are critically short
of selenium since we stopped importing North American wheat grown in
selenium-rich soils. This essential mineral supports numerous vital
enzyme functions in the body and helps reduce cancer risk, yet the most
influential risk assessment body in Germany wants consumers to be
limited on a daily basis to the amount of selenium found in just
one-third of a brazil nut!
Food supplements are taken by around half the population of
most
western countries, and increasing amounts of research—as well as
experience from the practice of clinical nutrition—shows that increased
vitamin and mineral intakes can substantially improve wellbeing, at
very little cost to government.
On the other hand, the radiation emitted by cellular phones,
cordless DECT phones and WIFI systems far exceeds those levels
considered safe by the majority of scientists researching the risks of
very low intensity electromagnetic radiation from such devices.
Children and foetuses are most susceptible, yet the public are told
nothing about these risks. Just how well are these risks being managed
or communicated?
Most people are exposed to multiple sources of radiation from
these
devices on a daily basis and their overall exposure has increased
dramatically over just the last five years as more and more wireless
technologies are rolled out.
We, at the ANH, argue that regulators or standard setting
bodies
have seriously misappropriated the risks—especially the relative
risks—of these contrasting technologies. The risks of food supplements
appear to have been dramatically overstated. Any analysis of food
safety data indicates that risks associated with vitamin and mineral
supplements are the lowest of any product consumed orally, being
substantially less than that of conventional foods. Yet, food
supplements, especially within the European Union, are facing
regulatory pressure that could see the vast majority of beneficial
dosages of nutrients banned.
Poly-herbal products originating from non-European traditional
medicinal cultures, such as Ayurveda and Traditional Chinese Medicine,
are also set to have a particularly rough ride in the years ahead, many
potentially falling between the two stools of European law designed for
traditional herbal medicines and food supplements respectively.
We also argue, and are supported in this by a group of leading
researchers in the field, that the risks from very low intensity
electromagnetic fields (EMF) emitted by a wide range of wireless
telecommunications technologies have been dramatically understated by
regulatory and standard setting bodies.
Alive to our concerns, Irish MEP Kathy Sinnott, has agreed to
host two petitions by the ANH which focus on each of these issues.
The European Parliament, the only vestige of a democratic
system
within the law-making environment of the European Union, has a
significant responsibility to its electorate to ensure that risks are
assessed objectively and accurately, while being managed
proportionately.
The ANH petitions, submitted yesterday to the European
Parliament
Petitions Committee, are calling for urgent and independent
re-evaluation of risk assessment and management approaches affecting
both the food supplement and telecommunications sectors, given recent
evidence and published science that suggests the models used in both
sectors are seriously flawed and not fit for purpose.
The ANH petitions can be downloaded from the following links:
· Food
supplement petition;
· Telecommunications
petition.
Please forward these petitions to those you know who
may be
concerned. We would also very much like to hear from organisations
wishing to lend their support to either or both of our petitions.
Please email us at info@anhcampaign.org.
Thank you for your consideration of these important public
health issues.
Yours, in health, naturally
Robert Verkerk BSc MSc DIC PhD
Executive and Scientific Director
Alliance for Natural Health
www.anhcampaign.org
Supporting the sustainability of natural health in Europe and beyond
Updated: 18 Sep
2008
Informant: Dorothee Krien