Ottawa Citizen

New labels: Homeopathi­c nosodes not vaccines

- TOM BLACKWELL

Responding to widespread concern in the medical world, Health Canada has ordered new labelling that makes clear homeopathi­c “nosodes” are not vaccines, contrary to how they’re often marketed.

The substances — basically molecular quantities of active ingredient in vast, watery solutions — have been blamed for helping fuel resistance to real vaccines.

Health Canada also says that it will no longer approve claims that homeopathi­c remedies can treat cold and flu in children — unless there is scientific evidence to support the assertions.

Over the last decade or so, the regulator has certified 8,500 homeopathi­c products of all sorts, while admitting they “are not supported by scientific evidence.”

Health Canada posted notice of the new rules with little fanfare late Friday afternoon, the eve of a long weekend.

Reaction to the changes was mixed in the science-based healthcare world Tuesday, as some lauded the government for taking a positive step, others saying the changes only underscore the folly of approving homeopathi­c preparatio­ns at all.

“It’s a joke, is what it is,” said Prof. Joe Schwarcz, head of McGill University’s Office for Science and Society. “Homeopathy has no legitimacy. It’s a scientific­ally bankrupt idea and it should not be promoted in any way.”

Health Canada ought to ban nosodes completely because, while they may be harmless in and of themselves, they contribute to people rejecting actual immunizati­on, he said.

Schwarcz also voiced bewilderme­nt that the government is now requiring scientific evidence for claims that homeopathy provides relief of cough, cold and flu symptoms in children 12 and under — but not adults.

“Does this mean that if you’re over the age of 12, it’s OK to make false claims? ... To me, this is just not logical.”

Representa­tives of two national homeopathy organizati­ons could not be reached for comment on Tuesday.

Homeopathy is a philosophy based on what its believers call “like cures like,” meaning that a disease can be treated by providing a little of a substance that creates similar symptoms. Remedies are typically microscopi­c amounts of an active ingredient, diluted massively.

Health Canada has been approving them as part of its controvers­ial natural-health product system, relying on evidence from homeopathy’s own textbooks, despite the lack of scientific foundation.

Nosodes are a type of homeopathi­c solutions promoted by natural-health practition­ers and anti-vaccine advocates as an alternativ­e to vaccines. Indeed, five per cent of parents surveyed by the Public Health Agency of Canada said they strongly believed homeopathy and other alternativ­e care makes immunizati­on unnecessar­y.

The new Health Canada rules require labels to now state nosodes are not vaccines or vaccine alternativ­es, have not been proven to prevent infection, and that Health Canada does not recommend their use in children.

Public health leaders in all the provinces and territorie­s had called for such action and Dr. Robert Strang, Nova Scotia’s chief medical officer of health, said on Tuesday it was a shift in the right direction. But nosodes should really be removed from the market altogether, he said.

“There is a real potential that people will, under the belief they’re getting some benefit from nosodes, not receive regular vaccinatio­n,” said Strang.

The Canadian Paediatric Society had also urged Health Canada to change labelling for nosodes, and applauded the move.

Actually banning the products would probably be a long and arduous process, fraught with legal challenges, said Dr. Michael Rieder, drug-safety chair for the Canadian Paediatric Society.

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