Pragmatist
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- May 12, 2004
- Messages
- 1,529
Lothian said:I was in Sainsburys recently waiting for a prescription when I noticed they were selling the phone guards. I saw the that Rogers Lab did the testing.
I also noted they had nearby displayed a brochure of products. All sorts of legitimate things included such things as bandages and braces. I recall it was an A4 binder with laminated pages (?)
But there was also contained 2 pages full of magnet ‘therapy’ jewellery. The items were accompanied by claims such as ‘proven to help blood circulation’ that missed the usual ‘thought to’ or ‘believed to’ that they normally contain to get round the fact that they don’t work.
Unfortunately I only saw this as my prescription arrived and was in a hurry to get home before the frozen stuff I bought previously melted but I intend taking a closer look next time and getting a copy so I can complain officially.
I’m interested to know if it was just my store or whether this catalogue is at all Sainsburys stores. I know David Sainsbury’s charity takes an interest in medical matters so it may be worth copying him in.
I was rather horrified to find this on the web:
http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/archive/index.php/t-142797.html
"Not that the ASA are much good at detecting pseudosicence when it's presented to them.
Last year I took a complaint against the makers of the ' Mobile Protection Chip' last year but the ASA accepted the manufacture's claims in full based on ' laboratory evidence ' from these guys Harry Oldfield (http://www.electrocrystal.com/pip.html) and Roger Coghill (http://www.cogreslab.co.uk/) Two well established psuedoscientists.
I appealed the ASA decision and I asked the ASA to have the data submitted by the company evaluated by someone with a technical background ( I suggested that the ASA ask Comreg for technical advice on the matter since they are responsible for electromagnetic field strength monitoring) but the ASA chose to dismiss the case and accept fully the manufacturers claims for the mobile protection chip instead."