Information is good. However if it is used in a campaign to deny over the counter botanical supplements to the consumer then that is bad.
No one is trying to deny anyone their woo. The article is just saying caution should be used when taking those supplements because it appears they can interfere with real medicines leading to poor outcomes for the patient.
Information is good. However if it is used in a campaign to deny over the counter botanical supplements to the consumer then that is bad.
No one is trying to deny anyone their woo. The article is just saying caution should be used when taking those supplements because it appears they can interfere with real medicines leading to poor outcomes for the patient.
But that is how the effort to deny begins. Look at Europe.
This reply was modified 8 years, 1 month ago by bnw.