In today's news:
Traditional herbal remedies have never been more fashionable: sales have almost doubled in eight years. There's just one problem: science suggests that they don't work.
An estimated 16 million people use them, and surveys suggest that four out of five are satisfied with the results. Sales have almost doubled since 1999 to £191m, fostered by celebrities led by Prince Charles. There are at least 1,000 registered practitioners and an uncountable number who are unregistered. Can so many people be wrong?
The answer is yes, according to two experts who have launched the latest assault on herbal medicine, the practice of treating ailments with either a single "natural" plant, refined and standardised, or a concoction individually tailored to a patient's needs.
Dr Peter Canter and Professor Edzard Ernst from the Peninsula Medical School at the University of Exeter called yesterday for the sale of herbal medicines to be banned unless evidence of their efficacy can be shown. Where there are known risks and no evidence of benefit, there can be no justification for allowing them to remain on to the market, they said.
Read on…
http://news.independent.co.uk/health/article3024732.ece