Medicine...

Perhaps it was not a question of science.Mattus wrote:Swisse.
Swisse had been ordered by the complaints resolution panel of the Therapeutic Goods Administration to withdraw their advertisements which suggest their products are "clinically proven" and "independently tested", and also taking aim at their "You'll feel better on Swisse" which the TGA found was not supported by evidence for many of their products.
Now the federal court has set aside the ruling, claiming Swisse was denied "natural justice" (what ever the fuck that means), ordered the TGA to pay Swisse's legal costs and opened the way for them to return to the air making frankly unsupported claims about the benefits of taking their overpriced candy.
It frustrates me to no end that the findings of the chief scientific medical authority in Australia, one that is supported by panels drawn from experts across the country, is trumped by a federal judge with no more than a high school level of scientific understanding.
http://www.news.com.au/business/breakin ... 6367322407" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Hi Atlanta, a lot of people, queen and commoners everywhere, swear by certain homeopathic remedies and herbal concoctions, and perhaps some of them do work for some people, some of the time. Or maybe there is a coincidence of apparent healing so that the person believes the remedy has worked.AiA in Atlanta wrote:"For her extended foreign tours, the Queen’s luggage can weigh more than four tons — and that includes 60 vials of homeopathic medicines, carried in a special leather case, without which she won’t travel anywhere.
She is a firm believer in alternative remedies, preferring them to conventional medicine."
No medicine or procedure is out of reach for QEII yet she prefers "alternative remedies." Hmmm ...
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