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Health Food Store
Recommendations Could Be Bad for Your Health Behind the Cancer Headlines® Patients with breast cancer may be
put at risk if they follow misleading advice from health food store employees.
Research published in the journal Breast
Cancer Research shows that store assistants often recommend products with
no proven benefit, that are also expensive and potentially harmful. Edward Mills from the The average cost of these products
was $58 per month, with the more expensive remedies of up to $600 relying on
"insufficient or questionable research". In addition, many
recommendations were unaccompanied by discussions on the possible adverse
effects of the product, or its potential interaction with conventional cancer
treatments. To collect the data, eight people,
who had been trained to act as customers whose mothers' were suffering from
breast cancer, visited 34 Canadian stores. They browsed the store until
approached by an employee and then asked for product recommendations, giving
information about their mothers' treatment regime only when asked. They then followed
a memorised questionnaire to get information about
the costs involved, the usage, effectiveness and safety of the product offered
and the relevant education of the employee. 33 different products were
recommended, none of which was supported by evidence of effectiveness. 23
employees (68%) did not ask whether the patient was taking prescribed
medication. Only three employees (8.8%) discussed the adverse effects of the
products and only eight employees (23.5%) pointed out that the products might interact
with prescribed drugs. Two employees suggested that the products may cure the
breast cancer, and one counseled to cease conventional treatment with Tamoxifen
because it was "poisonous". Only three of the employees had
had any formal education in complementary and alternative medicine. Several
said that formal education was unnecessary, and others that working in the
health food environment for several years was
experience enough. The authors call for educational
initiatives targeting health store workers to create a safer and more
evidence-based health food business. They say that many patients are attracted
to natural health products because they consider them natural and therefore
less toxic than prescription medicine. Yet, recent reports suggest that these
products may interact with drugs used in chemotherapy, by reducing their
effectiveness or increasing toxicity. Mills and colleagues urge physicians to
be aware that their patients could be taking natural health products and that
these may be the source of unexplained reactions to treatment. Mills and his colleagues believe
that action is needed: "Governing bodies should consider health food
stores as commonly utilized, yet unregulated, sections of the health care
system…Regulators need to consider regulations to better protect vulnerable
patients from incurring significant costs due to their purchasing of natural
health food products lacking evidence of benefit and of questionable
safety." Mills said, "Patients with
breast cancer are in the difficult situation of seeking treatment options and
are susceptible to misinformation. It is unfortunate that we do not have better
evidence of risks or benefits of natural health products to guide decision
making for this vulnerable population". SOURCES: Breast Cancer Research,
August 2003 BioMed Central (http://www.biomedcentral.com) DISCLAIMER!Behind the Cancer Headlines (TM) is a service of Willis-Knighton Cancer Center.The articles in Behind the Cancer Headlines (TM) are written by national medical editorsand writers who review current literature and develop timely articles in non-technicallanguage. Sources of information are cited for each article. If you have questions, referto the sources listed or to your physician. Willis-Knighton Cancer Center is notresponsible for content. Articles are updated on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. This information is provided for information only and is not a substitute for informationfrom or care by a physician. |
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