Monday, November 21, 2011

Black Press - British Columbia - Bclocal Again


On Nov. 2, 2011 I sent the following message to bclocalnews.com:
Please check my blog and leave a comment explaining why your publication refuses to post my comments.
http://rosemary-jacobs.blogspot.com/2011/11/comments-british-columbian-publication.html
Do you pay writers like Brenda Gill to write for you? Does she pay you or do you publish her material for free so that she can promote her business?
Rosemary Jacobshttp://rosemaryjacobs.comhttp://www.webanstrich.de/rosemary/http://rosemary-jacobs.blogspot.com
The reason that I asked about their relationship with writers like Gill was because in order to send an email to the publication I had to fill out a form on the site that had a title called “subject” with a drop down menu with the following options:
placing an ad
placing a classified ad
placing an obit
promoting your business online
feedback to editor

I wondered about the one offering to promote one’s business online. Did that mean that for a fee they would publish promotional material you submitted as newspaper “articles”? Might it even include having a ghost writer, a newspaper “reporter”, write promotional material for you, material that they publish without clearly labeling it as advertising or stating that it is paid for? Or could it be that they want to publish your material free of charge to fill space and save money by not having to hire journalists to write for them? If that is the case, does an editor check the articles you write for accuracy the way the media claims they check stories filed by reporters? 

Although I never did get an answer to my question about their relationship with writers, I did receive this, sent on November 2, apparently right after my email had been received:
Hello Rosemary;
Unfortunately, the Disqus commenting engine will hold back any comments containing a hyperlink or URL. It this case, there were three links included in your comment. Although these three links are, in fact, value added, I'm sure you can appreciate that not all are. Black Press must keep this logic in place to ensure inappropriate web links do not make their way to its news sites. 
The moderation and approval of comments held from automatically posting - containing hyperlinks etc. - is usually done each morning, however, with limited staffing it often slips for a time. In your case, the comments had not been moderated for days. That is not acceptable by our standards, so we apologize. 
The comment in question has now been moderated for approval. We thank you for your contribution and continued support. 
Take care.-------------Black Press Web Producerwww.bclocalnews.com
True to his word, what he called the “comment in question” was posted when I checked, but since the other two were still not up, I sent him this:
On Nov 2, 2011, at 6:30 PM, Webeditor - Marco wrote:Unfortunately, the Disqus commenting engine will hold back any comments containing a hyperlink or URL. 
Thank you for your response. May I suggest that you note this about Disqus on your site. I use it often and have never noticed the problem before. Perhaps you have set it up differently than others? 
It this case, there were three links included in your comment. Although these three links are, in fact, value added, I'm sure you can appreciate that not all are. Black Press must keep this logic in place to ensure inappropriate web links do not make their way to its news sites.  
I assume you have had problems with hyperlinks that commentators have posted.  
The moderation and approval of comments held from automatically posting - containing hyperlinks etc. - is usually done each morning, however, with limited staffing it often slips for a time. In your case, the comments had not been moderated for days. That is not acceptable by our standards, so we apologize. 
The comment in question has now been moderated for approval. We thank you for your contribution and continued support.  
What about the comments that I made about these articles? They have not been posted either.http://www.bclocalnews.com/opinion/letters/128212283.htmlhttp://www.northshoreoutlook.com/business/116764229.htmlYou will find the comments here:http://rosemary-jacobs.blogspot.com/2011/09/british-colombia-naturopaths-and-local.html
Sorry I spelled Columbia in Spanish. I did go back and correct it but don't know how to change it in the URL. 
Take care.
If you do not decide to leave a comment on my blog, I will inform readers about this myself. Thanks again for getting back to me, especially so promptly, and for posting my comment. I believe that naturopaths put the public at great risk and want very badly to warn people of the danger so that they can review the material for themselves and make informed decisions about  their treatment options. http://rosemaryjacobs.com/naturopaths.html  
I never got another response from bclocalnews.com and as of today, November 21, 2011 they have not posted my other two comments. 

I find this highly deceptive on a site that loudly broadcasts itself as a news site. It seems to me that offering the option called “promote your business online”, which is only seen by those who try to contact the paper directly by email, is the equivalent of “the small print” people have traditionally been warned to look out for and scrutinize in contracts they were about to sign, the major difference being that the small print was included right beneath the large print and people were educated to read the entire contract, the large and the small print, whereas people have not yet been educated to search through all the pages on a website looking for important information not included on the pages the public generally looks at. 

Readers Beware. Just because a publication promotes itself as a newspaper doesn't mean that the material it publishes is reviewed for accuracy by editors, that the company employs fact checkers or that it posts comments that question the accuracy of the material writers present. 

Black Press, Brenda Gill, bclocalnews.com, deceptive journalism, deceptive newspapers, dangerous naturopaths, British Columbia, Canadian press

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Dr. Oz


Dr. Oz has put together a package of alternative medical treatments that he has awarded his very own “seal of approval” to. In other words, he recommends them. 

I didn’t get much beyond number two, vodka and the botanical Rhodiola rosea for “stress relief” because it brought back such unpleasant memories. 

My dad was an alcoholic, but he didn’t start drinking other than socially until the 1950s when he was in his 40s and our family doctor, noticing  how tense and stressed Dad always was, told him to have a cocktail before dinner every night to relax.

Back then doctors were highly respected authority figures. The doctor’s seal of approval was all that dad needed to get him to go from social drinking to nightly drinking. Just like Oz, our family doctor recommended one drink, but my dad, unlike my mother, couldn’t stop at one. The irony of it is that I think the doctor had the same problem my dad did and that he died prematurely of cirrhosis of the liver caused by the same stress relief remedy that probably killed my dad. 

Like my father, the family GP, General Practitioner, was also the product of a devout Irish Catholic family. Alcoholism was probably in both their genes. I’ve always been afraid it was in mine too. I’m guessing that it was because of their culture that neither dad nor our doctor could face, acknowledge or deal with the reason why my father was perpetually stressed and decided instead to simply “treat the symptoms” rather than the cause of his condition. 

While I’m not sure that I know the cause myself, I believe that I do. I think that marrying my mother was a tragic mistake for both of them. They brought out the worst in each other. Although they must have loved each other when they married, they were from completely different worlds. My mother’s parents were Russian Jews. Back then my parents’ marriage was called a “mixed marriage” and believe me everyone including both their families was very disturbed by it. Strange my dad could break that taboo but not the one about divorce, but then maybe he knew he’d hear a bunch of I-told-you-sos and it was the I-told-you-sos that he couldn’t face. Or maybe he feared that if we didn’t all live under the same roof that he wouldn’t be able to support us. It beats me. 

However, hearing Dr. Oz, Oprah’s television doctor and health guru, telling people to drink to treat their stress, horrifies me. In this day and age why doesn’t he know that many people can’t take just one drink and that anyone who is constantly or even just frequently stressed should learn the cause and try to deal with it? He of all people, the “alternative medicine promoter”, a member of the sect that constantly shouts that MDs, the practitioners of evidence-based medicine, only treat symptoms while they, the alts, treat the causes of disease.

It also disturbs me that Oz recommends adding a botanical drug to the vodka. Actually, he recommends many botanicals in spite of the fact that no one knows if any of them will eventually be found to be as lethal as cigarettes, that other natural stress remedy that both my parents were addicted to, and that by the time that the toxicity of the botanical becomes apparent it will be too late to prevent thousands of premature deaths. 

What makes this even stranger is that not too long ago Oz scared many of his viewers by claiming that apple juice given to babies contains arsenic and that although the amount is low and the FDA and scientific community, which have studied arsenic for decades, state that the amount and type are no cause for alarm, Oz said he was concerned about long term safety. 
http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/health/2011/09/15/dr-besser-vs-dr-oz-apple-juice-showdown-on-gma/
Concerned about long term safety of something well studied but not concerned about the long term safety of things that have never been studied? Why the double standard, Doctor?

Oz’s recommending alcohol to treat stress and botanicals that have never been studied or evaluated for long term safety scares the hell out of me, especially since there are probably thousands, or maybe millions, of people who watch his show and believe all he says, but there is another thing about the TV doc and his medical sideshow that simply annoys me. 

His face constantly pops up in ads on my FaceBook page and when I browse the Internet. I’m really tired of his using his MD, entertainment TV program and celebrity status to try to sell me products. 

But then again maybe the reason his sideshow is so popular is because he tells the public what it wants to hear - there are simple, inexpensive solutions for all of life’s problems. Health and happiness can be bought. They come in a bottle. 

“Entertaining” lots of unseen TV viewers and offering them simple panaceas for all that ails them must be far less stressful for Oz than practicing heart surgery, a brutal field that constantly looks reality and death in the eye, one where the doctor has to truthfully inform patients of dangers, risks and the odds of success and one in which he has to tell the family that dad died on the operating table. One where you have to face consequences as opposed to a TV show where you will never learn that someone who took your advice was seriously harmed by it.

Dr. Oz, natural remedies, stress relief, botanical drugs

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Comments A British Columbian Publication Won't Post


On October 30, 2011 I read this article by naturopath Brenda Gill 
in the online edition of bclocalnews.com, a British Columbia publication.

I left the following comment which as of today, November 2, 2011, has not been posted.

Be careful what you consume. While it is true that observational studies do not reliably show cause and effect, it is also true that dietary supplements including vitamins do not have to be studied before they are sold and usually aren't. As a result, there is no way to know if they offer benefits, cause harm or are just a total waste of money. Only the extremely naive like naturopaths would believe that they either offer benefits or can’t hurt without solid evidence demonstrating that. There could well be something out there that many people take which is as lethal as tobacco and that by the time that is discovered it will be too late to prevent a lot of needless premature deaths.
Rosemary Jacobs
http://rosemaryjacobs.comhttp://www.webanstrich.de/rosemary/http://rosemary-jacobs.blogspot.com

This is not the first failure of bclocalnews.com or a naturopath writing for it to refuse to post a comment I submitted.

Is there a pattern here?

I don’t take an Internet site seriously that doesn’t permit readers to post comments or offer an easy way to contact the site owners and authors to present differing opinions or evidence that they may have gotten their facts wrong. To me such a failure indicates that the people involved are promoting their personal beliefs, agendas or goods and services and that they don’t want their readers to hear anything that might make them think that the material on their site could possibly be inaccurate. 

However, I do take seriously a site that provides for comments, especially one that bills itself as a news site, until, that is, I discover that the site refuses to post negative comments. I think that is downright deceptive. As far as I’m concerned not only does it indicate that the authors are promoting their beliefs, agendas and/or businesses, it also shows that they want readers to believe that they are being open and objective while in reality they are deliberately preventing anyone who disagrees with them from telling that to their readers. 

The only way I have found to contact anyone at bclocalnews.com is by going to their site and clicking on the “contact us” link. That brings up a form to fill out. After one has done that, he clicks the “submit” button and wonders if anyone in authority at the publication will ever see it. 

I am now going to fill out the form, give them this URL and request that they leave a comment here explaining why my comments on their site have never gotten past their moderators. 

Brenda Gill, naturopaths, British Columbia, newspapers, bclocalnews.com 

Friday, October 21, 2011

Margaret Durst & The Mason County News Again


On October 17, 2011, I discovered that Margaret Durst had published an article http://www.masoncountynews.com/news/article/46644 in the Mason County News on October 12, 2011 promoting colloidal silver and submitted the following comment.

Margaret, where do you get this stuff? Some references please. Search PubMed, the online index of medical journal articles, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?db=pubmed. Give me a reference to one study that shows that ingesting silver in any form or amount offers benefits. Then search it using the term “argyria” and see all the documented cases of skin discoloration caused by consuming silver, even the kind made electrically.
I’ve had argyria for over 50 years and been reviewing the medical literature on it for decades. I’ve never found any evidence that consuming it in any form or amount offered any benefits whatsoever or that there were any effective antibiotics prior to about 1940. I have found lots of evidence, see PubMed for starters, that consuming silver causes harm, that it is dangerous snake oil. And I am not alone. Check here:
http://nccam.nih.gov/health/alerts/silver/index.htm (Search NCCAM using the term "silver".)http://www.fda.gov/Food/DietarySupplements/Alerts/ucm184087.htmhttp://www.drweil.com/drw/u/id/QAA363388 (One of the major US promoters of "dietary supplements" and "natural remedies".)http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/colloidal-silver/an01682This is the site of a lawyer who is getting out-of-court settlements on behalf of people who have gotten argyria recently from silver supplements.http://www.goldenberglaw.com/CM/PracticeAreaDescriptions/Colloidal_Silver-Argyria.asp
And BTW you are breaking the law by making drug claims for a dietary supplement. The FDA and the State of Texas have taken legal action against people who have done that.
It will be interesting to see if you post this comment or ignore it like you did my previous one.http://rosemary-jacobs.blogspot.com/2011/10/margaret-durst-mason-county-news.html
Rosemary Jacobs
I also sent the following email to the paper.

Your columnist, Margaret Durst, is breaking the law by making drug claims for silver, a dietary supplement. http://www.masoncountynews.com/news/article/46644
It is illegal to do that. The FDA and the State of Taxes have taken action against others who have done it.http://www.star-telegram.com/2011/08/30/3325034/state-suing-fort-worth-naturopathic.html
I just posted this comment after her "article":
Margaret, where do you get this stuff? Some references please. Search PubMed, the online index of medical journal articles, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?db=pubmed. Give me a reference to one study that shows that ingesting silver in any form or amount offers benefits. Then search it using the term “argyria” and see all the documented cases of skin discoloration caused by consuming silver, even the kind made electrically.
I’ve had argyria for over 50 years and been reviewing the medical literature on it for decades. I’ve never found any evidence that consuming silver in any form or amount offers any benefits whatsoever or that there were any effective antibiotics prior to about 1940. I have found lots of evidence, see PubMed for starters, that consuming silver causes harm, that it is dangerous snake oil. And I am not alone. Check here:
http://nccam.nih.gov/health/alerts/silver/index.htm (Search NCCAM using the term "silver".)http://www.fda.gov/Food/DietarySupplements/Alerts/ucm184087.htmhttp://www.drweil.com/drw/u/id/QAA363388 (One of the major US promoters of "dietary supplements" and "natural remedies".)http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/colloidal-silver/an01682This is the site of a lawyer who is getting out-of-court settlements on behalf of people who have gotten argyria recently from silver supplements.http://www.goldenberglaw.com/CM/PracticeAreaDescriptions/Colloidal_Silver-Argyria.asp
And BTW you are breaking the law by making drug claims for a dietary supplement. The FDA and the State of Texas have taken legal action against people who have done that.
It will be interesting to see if you post this comment or ignore it like you did my previous one.http://rosemary-jacobs.blogspot.com/2011/10/margaret-durst-mason-county-news.html
Rosemary Jacobs
(There may be minor differences. I edited the comment before submitting it but didn't save the changes.)
Is there something you can do to alert the public and prevent someone else from getting argyria?
Rosemary
Rosemary Jacobs

The following response arrived immediately.

I’ve also forwarded your comments to Mrs. Durst.G
Gerald L. (Gerry) Gamel, Editor
Mason County News
325/347-5757 Voice -- 325/347-5668 FAX

To which I responded:

Thank you. I hope that Ms. Durst very quickly presents solid evidence supporting her claims or admits that she was mistaken and alerts the public to the danger and uselessness of ingesting silver. I also hope that the paper does a well researched article about dietary supplements and the need to independently verify any claims, especially those from salespeople, about safety and efficacy.

Then I checked the first Durst article that I had commented on and blogged about http://rosemary-jacobs.blogspot.com/2011/10/margaret-durst-mason-county-news.html and discovered that my comment had been posted after it, yet when I looked again today, October 21st, it was no longer there and as of today, the comment I submitted after her article promoting silver has not appeared.

Ms. Durst’s columns are also published on http://www.lewrockwell.com/, a site which does not enable readers to post comments and, as far as I can tell, doesn’t provide anyway for them to contact or communicate with the site owner or its writers. 

I personally don’t take such a site seriously. To me the failure to include an easy way to offer different opinions or to present evidence of factual errors indicates that the people running the site are promoting their personal beliefs, agendas or goods and services and that they don’t want their readers to hear anything contradictory. That plus the fact that Lew Rockwell bills itself as “anti-state, anti-war, pro-market” leads me to believe, well at least hope, that any rational person who bothers reading it will take what it says with the proverbial grain of salt. 

However, I don’t think the same can be said for material published in “newspapers” since journalists have long indoctrinated us with the idea that papers have editors who check sources and facts zealously deleting anything that can’t be independently verified. In fact, I’ve very recently heard publishers claim that that is exactly why traditional publications are needed by society and why they are so much superior to Internet sites where anyone can and does write whatever he wants. 

If it were true that reporters and editors do the job we have been taught that they do, I don’t think the newspaper and broadcasting industries would be suffering the serious declines in readership that they are today. But till the word gets out to everyone that they are not, let me repeat, do not believe claims about anything as important as your health, not even those that you read in the paper, hear on the radio or see on TV, unless you independently verify them or, if you lack the time and resources to do that, have them verified by an expert with no financial interest in the products or services being promoted. 

While that is especially true for claims made by salespeople, it also applies to those made by the media, which unfortunately often uses promotional material written by salespeople to fill space. And, of course, since newspapers, TV and radio stations are in business to make money, they have to publish material that interests the public and pleases, or at least doesn’t offend, advertisers in order to make a profit so that they can stay in business. 

Tags: Margaret Durst, Mason County News, Mason County Texas, colloidal silver, the media, newspapers, Lew Rockwell.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Margaret Durst - Mason County News


On October 6, 2011 this article appeared in the online edition of the Mason County News, a Texas publication. 
It was written by Margaret Durst who follows her name with “ND”, initials that mean “Naturopathic Doctor”. Since Texas doesn’t recognize naturopaths or permit them to call themselves doctors, I don’t know if Durst bought her degree from a diploma mill, awarded herself the title or “earned” it at one of the “accredited” 4 year naturopathic colleges. However, what I’d really love to know is whether or not she, who is called a “columnist” by the paper, is paid by them for her articles, pays them to publish her work or writes them for free. Whatever the case may be, I’m certain that Durst uses her column to promote her business, The Green House, “a vitamin, herb and health food store in Mason, Texas.”

Since Durst recommended colloidal silver for children in her article, I posted the following comment after it which, as of today, October 12, 2011, has not been posted, never having made it past the moderator.

Please, do not give your children silver in any form! It can make them look like me or Paul Karason, The Blue Man of Oprah fame. We have argyria. Taking silver internally offers no benefits whatsoever and it can harm you!
If you want to avoid the flu, get a flu shot and for heavens sake don't throw away hard earned money on products alleged to cure the common cold! There is no cure. It goes away on its own. Remember the old saying, The cure is worse than the disease? That is always possible and that is why you shouldn't take or give your children remedies or drugs for things like colds that are not serious and go away on their own.
Rosemary Jacobs
http://rosemaryjacobs.com http://www.webanstrich.de/rosemary/
http://rosemary-jacobs.blogspot.com
Margaret Durst, Mason County News, Mason, Texas, The Green House, Naturopath, colloidal silver

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

What Argyria Looks Like

It has always been very difficult to capture argyria, the skin discoloration caused by silver, on film. I have had the condition for over 50 years developing it when I was a teenager.

http://rosemaryjacobs.com/rose2.html

http://rosemaryjacobs.com/rose3.html


When I was young, human beings developed photographs, and I suspect that when they saw an argyric person in one they thought, “No. This can’t be right. She can’t be this color,” and they adjusted the color mix to make us look the way they thought we should. If the photo showed us with other people, the adjustments made everyone look a little “off”, but viewers weren’t surprised because they were accustomed to photographs that often produced colors that were "a little off".


Like most argyric people, I’ve always hated to have my picture taken, but unlike most of the others, I did let some people take a few over the years, mostly my dad who was an amateur photographer, and they were mostly slides. I posted some on my webpage to show you what I looked like before I turned gray and before and after I was dermabraded.

http://rosemaryjacobs.com/argyria_photos_intro.html

At the bottom, you will see a lady who had her entire body discolored by silver.


In this digital age it is easier to show our discoloration, but often even digital photos make us look “just like you” and color appears different on different computer screens and mobile devices. It isn’t just us amateurs who have this problem. I’ve worked with lots of professionals who did too. That includes AP photographers and network TV video cameramen.


To compound matters, our discoloration changes in different light and probably when surrounded by different colors. I had been told that for years but never comprehended it till I met Arline, a lady who got argyria recently from a silver “dietary supplement” labeled “colloidal silver” or “CS”.


Arline and I met when Good Morning America flew me out to Las Vegas to meet her in person and be interviewed for one of their TV programs although we had spoken often on the phone before then. We met originally when a person who saw me on Ripley’s Believe It Or Not told Arline that she thought she had the same condition that I have and, with her permission, contacted me by email to ask that I phone Arline who doesn’t have a computer.


When I walked into the hotel room for the interview, Arline and her sister were seated with the TV producer and crew, but they looked fine to me. Neither looked discolored, until that is, we walked out into the sunlight. There Arline's discoloration was startling. It was also startling under the fluorescent light in her dermatologist's office. Yet in spite of this, the cameraman was never able to show the startling effect on video, but the following photos do. They show exactly how Arline looks at her worst, how I think I looked before I was dermabraded and how most people with generalized argyria look.





Here are photos which I think show what I look like now, post-dermabrasion, at the age of 69. As a result of the experimental procedure my face has gone from a solid gray to a splotchy gray, pink and white.



You will find more photos of argyric people if you google “argyria” or “Paul Karason”. Paul is the only person besides Arline and me that I know of with argyria who has spoken out publicly and the only one I know of who appears to be thrilled with the attention looking weird gets him. Oh how I’d love to meet him in person!


You will find case reports about argyric people on PubMed, some of which include photos, if you search using the term “argyria” or “colloidal silver”. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?db=pubmed

If you live in the US and find articles indexed on PubMed that you'd like to read, go to the library at your local hospital. The librarian may have them or be able to get you copies at little or no cost.

Catherine Stack, The Niagara Gazette, Colloidal Silver

Is nurse Catherine Stack or perhaps the Niagara Gazette moving in the right direction regarding colloidal silver? I’m not sure.


An article appeared in the paper today, September 13, 2011, called Natural Health: Bacteria That Causes Belly Woes http://niagara-gazette.com/features/x1095947701/NATURAL-HEALTH-Bacteria-that-causes-belly-woes which stated that, “Colloidal silver” and other specific ‘natural’ products “are unproven remedies that have helped many individuals.” Well that certainly is an improvement over Stack’s previous article in which she stated, “Many studies seem to reflect that colloidal silver use has been proven to be useful against many different infections and is toxic against all species of fungi, bacteria, protozoa, parasites and certain viruses.” http://niagara-gazette.com/features/x1191298383/Natural-Health-The-benefits-of-colloidal-silver


But, of course, silver isn’t an “unproven remedy”. It is a disproven one. It is snake oil. Ingesting it in any form or amount offers no benefits whatsoever and can harm you. It can cause argyria making your skin gray like mine or blue like Paul Karason’s.


And yes, there are many people who think that CS has helped them, but there are many people who think that mislabeled water which they were lead to believe offered health benefits has helped them too. Surely, that is something I’d expect a nurse to know. Wouldn’t you?


However, looking at the article published online today by the Niagara Gazette, I’m not certain that Nurse Stack is the author. Just like her other articles a large photo of her appears next to the column and there is a caption below it telling readers about her and giving her contact numbers, but the byline, unlike the previous ones that say “by Catherine Stack”, now reads “by Janet Penn”.

Saturday, September 3, 2011

British Columbia, Naturopaths And The Local Media

On August 23, 2011 I read this letter http://www.bclocalnews.com/opinion/letters/128212283.html by Warren Bailey, MD which apparently had appeared originally in The Parksville Qualicum News, a Canadian newspaper published in the Province of British Columbia commenting on an article by Tara McCart, ND.


I left the following comment which as of today, September 3, 2011, has not been posted.

Unlike those who practice scientific or evidence-based medicine, naturopaths practice a belief-based system of medicine. I personally would have no problem with that if they admitted it to themselves and everyone else, but they don't.


In support of my claim about their use of drugs and therapies unsupported by objective evidence, and even in the face of a large body of evidence which shows that the substance is at best useless and at worst harmful, look at their use of silver

http://rosemaryjacobs.com/naturopaths.html

and tin

http://rosemary-jacobs.blogspot.com/2011/08/naturopaths-vermont-and-me.html (Scroll down to #12.)


Rosemary Jacobs

http://rosemaryjacobs.com

http://rosemary-jacobs.blogspot.com


Looking at it now, I realize that my last paragraph wasn’t very clear. I should have said, …in the face of a large body of evidence showing that substances that they use are at best useless and at worst harmful….But I don’t think that was a legitimate reason for not posting my comment, and unfortunately, this is the second time that bclocal has refused to publish a comment of mine about NDs.


After reading this article

http://www.bclocalnews.com/greater_vancouver/northshoreoutlook/business/116764229.html about naturopaths on their site on February 23, 2011, I submitted the following comment:

Naturopaths do not learn science-based or evidence-based medicine at Bastyr University or at any of their 4-year graduate schools. They know absolutely nothing about pharmacology or toxicology. I know this because naturopaths who have graduated from such schools and are licensed as physicians in the US State of Vermont have a state sanctioned formulary that includes silver, even permitting them to use it IV, this in spite of the consumer warnings from the FDA and National Center for Complementary and Alternative medicine. Ingesting silver is all risk and no benefit. It can discolor your skin. The condition is called argyria. Even worse when I alerted them and presented them with the evidence they ignored me.


http://rosemaryjacobs.com/naturopaths.html

http://www.webanstrich.de/rosemary/naturopaths.html

http://rosemaryjacobs.com

http://www.webanstrich.de/rosemary/

http://rosemary-jacobs.blogspot.com

After living in Canada for 10 years, I know that like their American cousins Canadian journalists pride themselves on accurately reporting all the news that is relevant to their readers, so I was surprised at their failure to include my comments, especially since the site itself states, “BCLocalNews.com was created in 2007 to provide a single, comprehensive source of provincial news.” http://www.bclocalnews.com/about_us/ If someone like myself is saying that professionals licensed to practice medicine are using useless and dangerous products and giving solid references to substantiate my claim, I would think that a lot of readers would think that was news that was very relevant to them.


What’s is BClocal’s problem? I know that my comments are accurate and believe that they state facts important for the public to hear. If they were published than anyone who cared about the topic could investigate it for himself, draw his own conclusions and, if he chose, add his own comments.


What makes the publication’s failure to post my comments even stranger is that other publications are reporting that the BC College of Physicians and Surgeons are saying the same thing that I am saying.

http://www.ratemds.com/social/?q=node/48444

http://www.timescolonist.com/health/Naturopaths+lack+important+training/4415122/story.html


I am sending the link to this blog to BClocal and hope that they leave a comment here explaining why they have not posted my remarks. Do they find them inaccurate or rude? I can’t imagine that they do. Neither can I imagine that they don’t believe my claims are substantiated. Do they find my comments controversial? If so, I would think that would be a very good reason to publish them. Or is it that they think of NDs as advertising customers and don’t want to lose their business? I’d love to know.



Friday, August 19, 2011

Naturopaths, Vermont and Me

With the help of Michael Marcotte, a local state representative, who put me in contact by email with the Vermont State Health Commissioner, Harry Chen, MD I met with Chris Winters, a lawyer who is the Director of the state Professional Licensing Board, on July 13, 2011. This is a summary of our communications, mostly the relevant emails which I’ve edited for clarity by deleting repetitious material such as links contained in my email signature and private email addresses. Where an explanation was needed, I inserted it in parenthesis.


At our meeting in his Montpelier office, Chris was charming and professional. Since he had sent me an email saying that the naturopaths, NDs, were going to remove "colloidal silver" products, p. 3, from their formulary,

http://www.vtprofessionals.org/opr1/naturopaths/info/Naturopathic%20Physician%20Formulary%2020091211.pdf,

I specifically wanted to ask if they were going to remove "silver", p. 5, also. He said he didn't think so and asked me to explain the difference.


I told him that colloidal silver, CS, is the name usually used for silver dietary supplements. Supplements were put in a special legal category in 1994 with the passage of the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act, DSHEA - pronounced duh shay. They are considered food under the law and for all practical purposes neither the FDA nor any other government agency has much jurisdiction over them. Unlike drugs, manufacturers do not have to present evidence of safety and efficacy before they sell them. Anyone can make a supplement although they are supposed to follow good manufacturing practices if they sell them to others. Under DSHEA, supplements are taken by mouth and it is illegal to make drug claims for them although "structure and function" claims can be made. I provided him with a copy of this article which gives a good summary of the subject.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/05/10/FDCQ1788VE.DTL


I told Chris that I thought that including colloidal silver in the formulary was illegal because by including a supplement in a drug formulary a drug claim was being made for it. And since it appears that they were not administering it by mouth but rather topically and in the eye, they were illegally using a supplement as a drug. While anyone can make a supplement, I believe that only licensed pharmacists and licensed drug manufacturers can legally make drugs. I asked Chris if NDs are licensed as pharmacists in Vt and he said that they are not.


When pharmacists make drugs, they call it compounding. They are only permitted to compound drugs using substances on what the FDA calls the bulk drug list. I am pretty certain that silver isn't there, and I know there are no FDA approved drugs that contain silver which are used internally. There is an approved topical silver drug called silver sulphadiazine (SSD) which is also in the ND formulary. I said that I saw no problem with its inclusion since SSD is an approved drug with little potential for abuse.


I explained to Chris that the FDA has a rule in the Federal Register (FR) saying that silver cannot be used as a drug and gave him a copy of the relevant material regarding silver in "the Bible of Pharmacology", Goodman & Gilman, 5th edition, 1975 which I believe is the last or next to the last edition that includes silver as well as an article from Clinical Toxicology, 34(1), 119-126 (1996), Review Silver Products for Medical Indications: Risk-Benefit Assessment by Fung and Bowen, two FDA doctors. All these references explain that the active ingredient in CS is silver, that there is no reason to ingest silver and that doing so can result in discolored skin, argyria.


Since the introduction to the ND VT Formulary states that naturopaths will comply with federal law, I said I didn’t know how they could include silver in the formulary and I didn’t know where they could legally obtain it. I simply couldn’t understand how they could find a legal manufacturer of an illegal drug and I was especially concerned about the silver and other substances that they used intravenously since I believe that the laws for manufacturing IV drugs are very stringent due to the need that they be sterile.


I asked Chris if the NDs had given him the information I had requested about the formulation and manufacturers of the “minerals” which include silver that their formulary permits them to use intravenously. He said they had told him that they couldn't give him that info and that they got the substances from places they had always gotten them from.


I found that most disturbing for two reasons. First, how on earth can anyone be sure that they are safe without knowing the sources? Do NDs really expect the public to simply trust them on the matter? And second because of the double standard. MDs and most professionals are over regulated to the point where it sometimes becomes ridiculous, but NDs who have been granted the privileges to practice medicine like MDs, even though they lack their training, are a law unto themselves and not required to answer to anyone. What would happen if you asked an MD for the formulation, brand name and manufacturer of the drug he wanted to put in your vein and he said, "None of your business, Charlie"?


Regarding the other substances listed in the formulary under the category of minerals that may be used intravenously, I explained that NDs administering such things have to have evidence showing that they are needed, the amount or the normal range generally found in humans and the amount that is toxic. They also have to have reliable tests to quantify the amount in a person’s body as well as a source of the product from a legal manufacturer to administer in case of a deficiency. Regarding silver which is not an essential mineral, I knew quite well that they lacked this.


Chris wondered why no one had ever brought these concerns up before. I suspect it is because so very few people know that NDs are licensed as "primary care physicians" and granted the privilege of using prescription drugs, ordering diagnostic tests, doing physical exams and even injecting people with substances they believe are safe and beneficial without any evidence to support their beliefs. I for one would love to know how they ever got the privilege to act as "primary care physicians" with prescription privileges without my knowing it. I think it is another example of special interest groups having laws passed behind closed doors.


Correspondence


1.

From: Rosemary Jacobs

Sent: Monday, June 06, 2011

To: Chen, Harry

CC: George Till (I have never had contact with Dr. Till. I CCed him because I had read that he is a state rep and an MD.)

Subject: VT Naturopaths


Hi, Doctor Chen. I hope you see this since I doubt that the previous Health Commissioner saw the message I sent her. I got your email address from Rep. Mike Marcotte and am CCing this email to Dr. Till as well since I think the matter may also interest him.


Have you seen the still current 2009 VT Naturopathic Formulary which I believe your predecessor was supposed to have reviewed before it was approved?

http://www.vtprofessionals.org/opr1/naturopaths/info/Naturopathic%20Physician%20Formulary%2020091211.pdf


I was horrified when I saw it. Although I am not an MD or a scientist, I suspect that some of the substances it contains are very dangerous and that many are useless. I can't imagine why anyone would use things like nickel, molybdenum or tin intravenously (p.5). I also wonder what formulations they are used in and who manufacturers them. While I don't know, I seriously doubt that they are on the list of bulk substances pharmacists are allowed to use for compounding.


Silver for IV use and colloidal silver for use in the eye are also included in the formulary (p. 5 & p.1). Silver is a topic I do know a lot about since I have had generalized argyria (skin turned gray or blue by silver) for over 50 years, a condition I got from silver containing nose drops prescribed by a caring but very naive MD. If my doctor had read his medical journals instead of fraudulent ads from silver drug manufacturers in an era when they were not strictly regulated, he never would have prescribed the drug that disfigured me. I have those articles and the fraudulent ads and many of them are older than I am.


When I learned in 1995 that silver, often called "colloidal silver" or "CS", was being sold as a "dietary supplement", I was horrified and predicted new cases of argyria. The salesmen laughed and said I didn't know what I was talking about. Unfortunately they were wrong. There are now many cases caused by silver supplements some of which you will find on PubMed.


Dermatologists are now experimenting with laser therapy as a treatment for argyria. Those that I have spoken with and their patients are very pleased with the results. One well known clinic charges $7,000 to treat an entire face and no one is satisfied with just a face. The cost of treating a whole body has been estimated at 100K. To my horror, insurance has been picking up the tab! This in a nation that can't provide affordable basic health care to all its citizens. Furthermore, the treatment isn't permanent. It has to be repeated and no one knows if their will be side effects later on.


I have had a webpage for about 15 years trying to alert the public to the dangers and uselessness of ingesting silver. My website has been cited in several medical journal articles. My story has gotten extensive international, national and local media coverage. Because of that and the fact that the FDA, NCCAM and many others have issued warnings about the danger and uselessness ingesting silver, I was horrified to learn that naturopaths licensed in my own state had included it in their state formulary. Worse yet, my efforts to alert them to the problem were completely ignored. For details and citations please look here: http://rosemaryjacobs.com/naturopaths.html and also at my blog.


Over the years many people have told me that silver had been recommended to them by an ND, but I always assumed it was the mail order kind. I couldn't imagine that those graduating from their 4 year (naturopathic) colleges would do that. In fact in light of the FDA rule in the Federal Register, I think that their use of it as a drug is illegal.

http://www.fda.gov/OHRMS/DOCKETS/98fr/081799a.pdf


I would be happy to meet with either or both of you to discuss this further and to show you any references you may want to see.


Rosemary

http://rosemaryjacobs.com

http://www.webanstrich.de/rosemary/

http://rosemary-jacobs.blogspot.com


2.

From: Harry Chen

Subject: RE: VT Naturopaths

Date: June 14, 2011

To: Rosemary Jacobs ,

CC: Rep. George Till, Michael Marcotte , Winters, Christopher


Rosemary,

Thanks for your email. Naturopaths are licensed and regulated by the Office of Professional Regulation not the Department of Health. The Department of Health does consult on the formulary but the ultimate decision rests with OPR. I appreciate your concerns and will examine them in more detail but suggest you contact Chris Winters at the Secretary of State's office with your concerns as they are the official regulators of Naturopaths.

Harry

Harry Chen, MD

Commissioner

Vermont Department of Health

802.863.7280


3.

From: Rosemary Jacobs

Subject: VT Naturopathic Formulary

Date: June 14, 2011

To: Chris Winters ,

CC: Michael Marcotte

Dr. Chen suggested that I speak with you about my concerns about the VT Naturopathic Formulary. May I have an appointment to speak with you in person?


I have already corresponded with and spoken to Terry Gray in person. You will find our correspondence here;

http://rosemary-jacobs.blogspot.com/2010/08/naturopaths-silver_6314.html and a summary of the problem here: http://rosemaryjacobs.com/naturopaths.html


I spoke with Terry shortly before the last election. She told me that I should speak with the legislature, something I had planned on doing, but I wanted to wait till after the new government was in place. It is now and I expect that elected officials are as comfortable in their jobs as they will ever be, but since Dr. Chen suggested speaking to you, I thought I'd try doing that before approaching the legislature.


Rosemary Jacobs

(address deleted)

(phone # deleted)


Rosemary


4.

From: Chris Winters

Subject: RE: VT Naturopathic Formulary

Date: June 15, 2011

To: Rosemary Jacobs

CC: Terry Gray

Dear Ms. Jacobs,

Thank you for your email and for the wealth of information on your websites regarding the dangers of silver. The advisors to the profession have agreed that colloidal silver should be removed form the naturopathic physician formulary and I will be working to make that happen as soon as possible. We do have a process for updating the formulary that includes seeking input from the Commissioner of Health, Naturopathic Physicians, MDs, and a Pharmacologist, so it may take some time to accomplish this.

If you would still like to meet in person, I would be happy to schedule an appointment.

Sincerely,

Chris

Christopher D. Winters, Director

Vermont Secretary of State's Office

Office of Professional Regulation

802.828.2458 (phone)

802.828.2368 (fax)

www.vtprofessionals.org


(Our meeting was scheduled for July 11, but Chris had to cancel it at the last minute. We rescheduled for July 13th.)


5.

From: Rosemary Jacobs

Subject: Drug Sources

Date: July 11, 2011

To: Chris Winters


Chris, one of the things I had planned on asking you to get for me at our meeting today was the formulation and brand name, if it is a commercially manufactured product, of the silver the NDs list on p. 5 of their formulary in the IV Minerals category. I'd also like to know if the NDs make it themselves and, if not, the name and address of the compounding pharmacist or manufacturer. Actually, it would be very interesting to have this information for several other substances in this category like tin, vanadium, nickel, molybdenum, copper....


I believe that since these substances are included in a state approved or sanctioned drug formulary that the information must be made available to anyone in the public who requests it and that since the NDs have included it in their formulary that they must have all that information at their fingertips.


I'd really appreciate it if you you get it to me at or before our meeting.


Thanks.


Rosemary


(At our meeting on July 13th, I gave Chris copies of Goodman & Gilman and Fung and Bowen. Although I had already sent the URL to the Final Rule in the Federal Register to Terry Grey who works in Chris’s office and included it in my blog, I was not sure that he had seen it. Therefore, on July 14th I sent him he following email.)


6.

From: Rosemary Jacobs

Subject: Silver

Date: July 14, 2011

To: Chris Winters


Chris, if you go here, http://www.fda.gov/OHRMS/DOCKETS/98fr/081799a.pdf, it will bring you to the Federal Register/Vol. 64, No. 158/Tuesday, August 17, 1999 Rules and Regulations (p. 44653) where it states:


QUOTE:

DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES

Food and Drug Administration

21 CFR Part 310 [Docket No. 96N–0144]

Over-the-Counter Drug Products Containing Colloidal Silver Ingredients or Silver Salts

AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS. ACTION: Final rule.


SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is issuing a final rule establishing that all over-the- counter (OTC) drug products containing colloidal silver ingredients or silver salts for internal or external use are not generally recognized as safe and effective and are misbranded. FDA is issuing this final rule because many OTC drug products containing colloidal silver ingredients or silver salts are being marketed for numerous serious disease conditions and FDA is not aware of any substantial scientific evidence that supports the use of OTC colloidal silver ingredients or silver salts for these disease conditions. DATES: This regulation is effective September 16, 1999.


FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:

Bradford W. Williams, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (HFD–310), Food and Drug Administration, 7520 Standish Pl., Rockville, MD 20855, 301– 594–0063.

END QUOTE


(You might want to contact the FDA at that # and ask them about using silver intravenously and about federal laws regarding the manufacture of drugs, especially for IV use.)


Under the heading “Background”, the rule states, “Colloidal silver is a suspension of silver particles in a colloidal base.” That means that silver is an ingredient in colloidal silver and covered by this FR rule. But if that isn’t clear enough, on page 44658 in the middle column right at the very top it sates:


QUOTE:

Further, there is a lack of adequate data to establish general recognition of the safety and effectiveness of colloidal silver ingredients or silver salts for OTC use in the treatment or prevention of any disease. These ingredients and salts include, but are not limited to, silver proteins, mild silver protein, strong silver protein, silver, silver ion, silver chloride, silver cyanide, silver iodide, silver oxide, and silver phosphate.

END QUOTE


It specifically lists silver, and all the relevant medical literature indicates that ingesting silver in any form or amount offers no known benefits and can cause argyria.


I am not a lawyer, but from my understanding of the FR rule I believe that the NDs are violating it. (I actually think they are violating many federal drug laws.) The introduction to their VT formulary specifically says that, “Use of medication included in the following formulary is limited to FDA approved indications, routes and dose regimens.” It goes on to speak of off-label uses, but as far as I know, off-label refers to using approved drugs for indications that they have not specifically been approved for. This is something done a lot in veterinary medicine where a drug approved for use in dogs is used “off-label” in cats. (It also occurs if a drug approved to treat one kind of cancer like ovarian is used to treat another like breast.)


I seriously doubt that the VT legislature ever intended to permit NDs to violate federal drug laws, especially not when by doing so they would be endangering people. I suspect the NDs believe that they know far more about medicine and law than they do and that they convinced the legislators of that. All their lobbying efforts repeat the mantra that they use science-based treatments and that they study the same subjects in their colleges (sometimes called "medical schools") as MDs do in their schools. All of which is baloney and shows how truly ignorant they are.


Rosemary


(Since Chris had asked about recent cases of argyria, I sent him the following.)


7.

From: Rosemary Jacobs

Subject: Recent Argyria Cases

Date: July 14, 2011

To: Chris Winters


Chris, it was a pleasure speaking with you today. I will get you the names and contact numbers of a few doctors who know about silver. Although I'm sure there are many in VT, especially dermatologists, toxicologists and opthamologists, aside from my own doctor who is seriously ill now, those I know are out-of-state.


You asked about recent cases of argyria. Tragically, there are many. You will find a few on PubMed if you use the search term “argyria”.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?db=pubmed

You will find Paul Karason if you search on Google either using "argyria" or his name as the search term. I have been in contact with several others personally (who won’t speak publicly).


If you go here http://rosemaryjacobs.com/naturopaths.html you will find more links and also see a photo of my friend Arline who got argyria about 10 years ago from a silver supplement. I think I was as dark as she is before I was dermabraded. She is pictured with my friend Andy. Colin (a lawyer Chris and I know) and Andy are good friends. Tell Colin to ask Andy what Arline looks like. Andy forgets names so he may have forgotten hers, but he has not forgotten her face.


Rosemary


8.

From: Rosemary Jacobs

Subject: Correction

Date: July 14, 2011

To: Chris Winters


Chris, I was incorrect when I told you that "colloidal silver products" are dietary supplements. I should have explained that colloidal silver and CS are the names that most silver salespeople and users use for silver supplements. The more accurate term would be silver supplements because, as you can see in the FR, there are no silver drugs approved for internal use. All silver products that are sold to be taken internally are legally "dietary supplements", foods, and drug claims cannot legally be made for them.


When I first heard about silver supplements in 1995 almost all the promoters claimed that the stuff consisted of very tiny particles of "pure" silver suspended in "pure" water. In addition to selling ready-made CS, they also sold, and still do, gadgets to make your own silver supplement electrically. These came with recipes. Chemists who reviewed the promotional material laughed. They said that the silver promoters knew zilch about chemistry and what they were making was not what they thought it was. Depending on the recipes, they made solutions that contained a mix of silver compounds, colloidal silver, ionic silver and sometimes silver salts. Eventually a few engineers got into the silver business and explained this to the others. After that a few started using other names for their supplements like ionic silver. Many said that their product was good and the other guy's was bad. Some said it didn't matter. All were good. Scientists disagree. They say ingesting silver in any amount or form is all risk and no benefit.


Rosemary


9.

From: Rosemary Jacobs

Subject: Fwd: Drug Sources

Date: July 18, 2011

To: Chris Winters

Cc: Michael Marcotte , Bob Lewis


Chis, please tell the naturopathic advisors that I want this information in an email from them. I don't care if they send it to you and you forward it to me or if they send it directly to me and CC it to you. As i said, I believe that this information must be given to anyone requesting it since the substances I'm asking about are included in the ND's VT sanctioned formulary.


Begin forwarded message:

From: Rosemary Jacobs <rosemary@rosemaryjacobs.com>

Date: July 11, 2011

To: Chris Winters <cwinters@sec.state.vt.us>

Subject: Drug Sources


Chris, one of the things I had planned on asking you to get for me at our meeting today was the formulation and brand name, if it is a commercially manufactured product, of the silver the NDs list on p. 5 of their formulary in the IV Minerals category. I'd also like to know if the NDs make it themselves and, if not, the name and address of the compounding pharmacist or manufacturer. Actually, it would be very interesting to have this information for several other substances in this category like tin, vanadium, nickel, molybdenum, copper....


I believe that since these substances are included in a state approved or sanctioned drug formulary that the information must be made available to anyone in the public who requests it and that since the NDs have included it in their formulary that they must have all that information at their fingertips.


I'd really appreciate it if you you get it to me at or before our meeting.


Thanks.


Rosemary


10.

From: Chris Winters

Subject: RE: Drug Sources

Date: July 18, 2011

To: Rosemary Jacobs


Hello Rosemary,

It is my understanding that there is no single manufacturer or compounder of any of these minerals. It is also my understanding that drugs, nutritional medicines, and botanical medicines are regulated by the FDA and these regulations include manufacturing guidelines. As such, I don't have a list for you and don't think it was intended under the formulary to have the state provide a list. Sorry if that is not a very helpful answer.

As I said before, the advisors believe silver should come off the formulary and we will remove it as soon as we do the next formulary update.

Chris


11.

From: Rosemary Jacobs

Subject: Re: Drug Sources

Date: July 18, 2011

To: Chris Winters


On Jul 18, 2011, at 4:17 PM, Chris Winters wrote:

It is my understanding that there is no single manufacturer or compounder of any of these minerals.


Chris, unless I hear otherwise, I have to assume that the naturopaths are refusing to provide me with the names of those who manufacture the products they use intravenously, even the name of their source of silver, which to the best of my knowledge there is no legal source for.


It is also my understanding that drugs, nutritional medicines, and botanical medicines are regulated by the FDA and these regulations include manufacturing guidelines.


I am aware of that. What I want to see is evidence that VT naturopaths are in compliance with those drug regulations.


As such, I don't have a list for you and don't think it was intended under the formulary to have the state provide a list.


If the state did not intend that the formulations of drugs on an state sanctioned formulary and the names of the manufacturers be given to anyone who requested it (sic), I seriously doubt that it represents the views of the citizens of the state. I also suspect that if the sources were legal that the NDs would not hesitate to provide them.


As I said before, the advisors believe silver should come off the formulary and we will remove it as soon as we do the next formulary update.


You said that the advisors where going to remove "colloidal silver products" from the formulary but probably not silver. Have they changed their minds about that? Are they now removing silver also? (As I told you, silver sulfadiazine is not a problem. It is an FDA approved topical drug with little potential for abuse.)


Rosemary


12.

From: Mary Skovira

Subject: On behalf of Harry Chen: VT Naturopaths

Date: July 25, 2011

To: Rosemary Jacobs

Cc: Rep.George Till


Ms Jacobs:

Attached is Commissioner's Chen response to your e-mail.


(The letter included in the email was in PDF format. Since I do not know how to copy or paste it here, I retyped it. If anyone would like me to forward them the original email in which it is contained, please let me know.)


Dear Ms. Jacobs,


Thank you for your email regarding the 2009 Vermont Naturopathic Formulary. I have met with the Director of the Office of Professional Regulation and understand that they are considering revising the formulary in the near future. In the course of that revision, I will formally review the proposed formulary.


I do want to respond to your specific concerns about the metals in the current Naturopathic Formulary. As noted below, there are some appropriate uses for these metals in medical treatment, although, as with all medications, there may be contraindications and other precautions that must be taken into account prior to prescribing treatment.


Molybdenum is an essential trace element and some people may be deficient in it and require supplements to be administered intravenously. Intravenous administration of minerals lessens the quantity necessary to address the deficiency and also avoids the formation of metal salts during digestion.


Tin is sometimes administered by naturopaths who believe tin can be used to treat baldness based on a few studies involving mice. The efficacy of this treatment has not been demonstrated in the medical literature. Tin is not an essential nutrient.


Nickel is a toxic metal and use or handling of objects made of nickel may cause asthma, urticaria, erythema multiform, contact dermatitis, and hand eczema. Nickel carbonyl is a possible human carcinogen. Also, it is a nutritionally essential element, although a specific deficiency state has not yet been defined in humans.


Silver salts and colloidal silver, as you note in your email, have been determined by the Federal Drug Administration not to be safe or effective for use in over the counter products. Nevertheless, when properly prescribed, silver may be appropriate for use topically in bandages and dressings used to treat burns, skin wounds or skin infections and in medicines used to prevent the eye condition conjunctivitis in newborn infants.


As I consult with the Director of the Office of Professional Regulation in regard to the proposed new formulary, I will consider whether to make any specific recommendations concerning these metals.


Thank you for your interest in the Naturopathic Formulary and for contacting me with your concerns.


Sincerely,


Harry L. Chen, MD.


13.

From: Rosemary Jacobs

Subject: Re: On behalf of Harry Chen: VT Naturopaths

Date: July 25, 2011

To: Mary Skovira

Cc: Rep.George Till


Dr. Chen, I have no idea if you and the office of the Secretary of State share information or if you have reviewed my webpage and blog.


You state in your email, "Silver salts and colloidal silver, as you note in your email, have been determined by the FDA not to be safe or effective for use in o/c products. Nevertheless, when properly prescribed, silver may be appropriate for use topically in bandages and dressings used to treat burns, skin wounds or skin infections and in medicines used to prevent the eye condition conjunctivitis in newborn infants."


As I explained to Mr. Winters, there is no problem with including silver sulfadiazine in the formulary. It is an FDA approved topical drug that cannot easily be abused. I gave him copies of the relevant material in Goodman & Gilman, 5th edition, 1975 which I believe is the last or next to the last edition that included silver as well as Clin Tox, 34(1), 119-126 (1996), Review Silver Products for Medical Indications: Risk-Benefit Assessment by Fung and Bowen, two FDA doctors. The later lists prescriptions drugs that contain silver. All are topical except Argyrol, the most famous brand of Mild Silver Protein, MSP, a type of colloidal silver. Argyrol was for ophthalmic use. However, since the article was written, Argyrol has been removed from the list and silver impregnated bandages have been added.


I am well aware of the use and effectiveness of silver nitrate in neonates eyes. However, MSP was also used and didn't work. When compounding pharmacists wanted to add it to the list of bulk drugs they are permitted to use to compound, the FDA advisory committee unanimously voted against including it. I know that because I was there. I presented written and oral testimony.

http://rosemaryjacobs.com/msp.html

http://rosemaryjacobs.com/PharmacyCompounding.html


Now would you please be so kind as to ask the ND advisors to email you (to forward to me) or to email me directly the formulation of the "colloidal silver preparations" on p. 3 of their formulary and the formulation of the "silver" they list under "minerals" for IV use along with the names and addresses of the manufacturers. I would also like this information for the other substances listed under "minerals" for IV use. I am not bothering to ask the NDs myself because of the way they have ignored me when I attempted to explain my concerns with silver.


Please understand.I have no problem at all with people using belief-based systems of medicine. What I have a problem with is their not fully disclosing that. I believe that anyone who sells or administers silver and other substances not backed by strong evidence of safety and efficacy as well as substances known to be harmful should be required to tell that to customers and patients. In other words taking silver as an example, if NDs want to believe that silver offers benefits that outweigh the risks, I think that they should have to tell people that the FDA, NCCAM, and numerous scientists disagree with them claiming that there is no evidence that ingesting silver in any form or amount offers any benefits whatsoever, and there is a lot of evidence indicating that it causes argyria, discolored skin which in severe cases is disfiguring.


I also believe that government should be transparent and that the public should be informed of the differences between NDs and the system of medicine they practice and that of MDs who practice EBM.


If tin safely and effectively treats baldness, that should be very easy to demonstrate for all the world to see. Maybe Andrew Weil would volunteer to be the first test subject. I find it very difficult to believe that the VT legislators would knowingly agree to let NDs inject people with tin when it is not an essential element and there is no evidence showing that it works. I also would love to know the formulation and source of the tin.


Rosemary


14.

From: Rosemary Jacobs

Subject: Re: On behalf of Harry Chen: VT Naturopaths

Date: July 26, 2011 10:56:34 AM EDT

To: Mary Skovira

Cc: Rep.George Till, MD, Rep. Michael Marcotte, Chris Winters


Ms. Skovira, please tell Dr. Chen that I went to the FDA homepage

http://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cder/ob/docs/queryai.cfm

the “Orange Book: Approved Drug Products with Therapeutic Equivalence Evaluations” page and searched using the "Minerals" that may be used intravenously which are included in the ND formulary.


There are no approved FDA Rx or OTC drugs for about half of them. Silver sulphadiazine cream is listed as being approved for topical use, but there are no other approved Rx or OTC drugs listed that use silver as the active ingredient. (I've already stated that SSD is not a problem in the formulary because it is approved and has little potential for abuse.) This brings us back again to: what formulation of silver do the VT NDs use intravenously; what formulations are they using of the other substances for which there are no approved drugs; and, who manufactures them.


I will be 69 in a month. I am not aging well and don't have lots of energy to waste. I'm also sure that all of you are very busy and don't have time to waste. I think the simplest way to get to the bottom of this is for a VT state official acting in that capacity to contact the FDA directly and ask them if the NDs are complying with or violating federal drug laws by including unapproved drugs in their drug formulary and for making drug claims for "colloidal silver products", since CS can only legally be sold as a dietary supplement not a drug and it is illegal to make drug claims for supplements.


If the NDs are violating federal drug laws, the state either has to admit it and tell them to stop or admit that it doesn't care and let them continue, but either way it has to be honest and opened about it. Being honest, opened and transparent is all the more essential since the state has licensed NDs as primary care physicians and given them the privilege of using legend (prescription) drugs even intravenously.


The only thing I find more appalling than having silver listed in a state sanctioned formulary is the reaction of the NDs when the professional board initially forwarded them my concerns. Instead of speaking with me and reviewing the documentation I presented, they brushed me off. That is totally incredible and a big contrast to the reactions I've gotten over the years from those who practice scientific evidence (sic, should read “scientific or evidence-based medicine) many of whom are embarrassed and apologize to me because of what someone in their profession did to me. They wish my parents had sued the responsible MD. When I said he was naive and made a mistake, they told me no he was incompetent and negligent and never should have used a silver drug in the 1950s. One actually tried to find a lawyer to sue of my behalf but the statute of limitations had long since expired.


If the NDs had listened to me and taken my concerns seriously when they first heard them, this probably would have stopped there, but they didn't and it gets worse. They ignore me every step of the way. My friend Arline who got argyria from a supplement even attended a conference full of NDs with me. She is in her 70s, has very little money and is not in the best of health. She is far more severely discolored than I am although I believe that I was as bad before I was dermabraded. http://rosemaryjacobs.com/naturopaths.html http://rosemaryjacobs.com/argyria_photos_intro.html


When I spoke out at a workshop at the conference, the woman next to me patted my hand. Afterwards several of the people there came up to thank us for attending and me for speaking out. The ND manning their information booth was very nice, but not one of them said, My God, look what silver does to people! How could we be so ignorant? How could we include it in our formulary? Thank goodness you have alerted us!


Over the years I have consulted some of the leading dermatologists in the world and been seen at 3 US medical schools. Dozens of doctors come to look at me and listen to me tell them what I know about silver and argyria, and they don't charge because they say that they learn from me even though the older ones have seen and investigated other argyric people besides myself.


Arline flew here all the way from her home in Las Vegas. She lives from hand-to-mouth. Since she worked for the airlines she can fly standby for very little money, but to make sure that she got here in time for the conference the NDs would be at, she paid for her flight here. I wanted to contribute but she wouldn't hear of it. Perhaps that gives you an idea of how important it is to us to inform the public about the dangers of silver and other substances which either are known to be dangerous or have never been adequately studied and how frustrating it is to be brushed off by people, NDs, who have gotten the state to license them as physicians.


People cannot make informed choices without accurate information and without complete disclosure. NDs licensed by the state as physicians have to be held (to) the the same standards of transparency as those who practice evidence-based medicine. Greater privileges bring greater responsibilities. NDs can't have their cake and eat it too. Scientists regularly publish the errors and abuses that they discover in scientific medicine. If alts. want to be licensed to practice medicine, they should have to do the same.


Rosemary