Response
to Consumer Reports Article about
Sports
Dietary Supplements, Ephedra
Statement
from the Ephedra Education Council
Washington,
DC (May 16, 2001) �
In Response to the June 2001 edition of Consumer Reports,
the Ephedra Education Council released the following statement
today:
"Overwhelming
scientific and medical evidence directly conflicts with Consumer
Reports� unfavorable statements about Ephedra contained
in an article on sports supplements. The facts are that Ephedra
dietary supplements are safe and effective when marketed according
to industry standards. Specifically, research conducted at
the prestigious Harvard and Columbia Universities, and recently
published in abstract form in the FASEB Journal and
Obesity Research, showed that dietary supplements containing
Ephedra and caffeine are safe and effective as an aid to weight
loss. The data from the Harvard and Columbia study confirm
the results of numerous other clinical studies, including
a separate, short-term study conducted by some of the same
Harvard and Columbia researchers and recently published in
the International Journal of Obesity.
As
support for their stance on Ephedra, Consumer Reports
specifically references a University of California, San Francisco
study by Christine Haller and Neil Benowitz, published last
year. It is important to point out that Haller and Benowitz
recently conceded in a letter to the New England Journal
of Medicine that their report �does not prove causation,
nor does it provide quantitative information with regard to
risk.� Moreover, Haller and Benowitz�s findings represent
old information that has already been reviewed and rejected
by scientific and medical experts because it conflicts with
more relevant and reliable data from clinical studies that
prove Ephedra�s efficacy. In August 2000, a panel of medical
and scientific experts reviewed the same information reviewed
by Haller and Benowitz and found that there was no association
between Ephedra and serious adverse events when it is taken
as directed.
And
finally, what Consumer Reports fails to point out is
that obesity itself results in 300,000 preventable deaths
each year in the United States, and that millions of Americans
are benefiting from Ephedra dietary supplements as an aid
to weight loss."
###
The
Ephedra Education Council is supported primarily by members
of the Ephedra Committee of the American Herbal Products Association,
a recognized leader in promoting the safe and responsible
marketing of dietary supplements. The Council provides factual
information to the media and public about
dietary supplements containing Ephedra. For more information,
logon to www.EphedraFacts.com.