Although the Guidelines for Vitamin and
Mineral Food Supplements have now been adopted by the Codex
Alimentarius Commission, there still remains much to play for
in the battle to maintain and improve our health freedoms.
Thus far, for example, the upper safe levels for the
Guidelines have not yet been set, nor are there any
restrictions on the forms of vitamins and minerals that can be
used in dietary supplements.
As regular readers of this newsletter will
be aware, the Guidelines were drafted by the Codex Committee
on Nutrition and Foods for Special Dietary Uses (CCNFSDU), who
meet once a year each November in Bonn, Germany. This year’s
meeting of the CCNFSDU will be held during 21-25 November, and
the National Health Federation will once again be sending a
delegation to attend, lobby delegations, speak out at the
meeting, and report back on the outcome.
Three items on the agenda at this year's
meeting are of particular importance to anybody who has an
interest in health freedom.
Proposals for
Additional or Revised Nutrient Reference Values (NRVs) for
labelling purposes
The proposal to consider additional or
revised nutrient reference values (NRVs) for labelling
purposes was originally made at the November 2003 meeting of
the CCNFSDU, and this year the Codex delegates will be
considering a discussion paper prepared by South Africa.
NRVs can essentially be thought of as a way
of describing the nutritional requirements of the average
person. Naturally, however, this presents us with a problem
because, given that each of us is
genetically unique, can it really be
said that there is such a thing as an ‘average’ person?
Moreover, in considering ‘requirements’
the fundamental question arises as to whether we are talking
about the nutritional requirements for ordinary health, or
those for optimum health.
The European Union and its allies will
doubtless be pressing at this meeting for the NRVs to be set
as near to RDA levels as possible. Fortunately, however,
the discussion paper prepared by South Africa shows
clear evidence of support for the argument that NRVs should
reflect the most recent scientific research, in order to
promote optimum health and reduce the risk of disease in the
majority of people. As such, it is expected that the opponents
of natural health and health freedom will very likely be
trying every trick in the book at this meeting in order to
achieve their aims.
Recommendations on
the Scientific Basis of Health Claims
This CCNFSDU agenda item is crucial to the
future of health freedom, because, in order for chronic
disease to become largely a thing of the past, dietary
supplement manufacturers need to be able to provide truthful
and non-misleading information about their products.
At present, however, health claims for
dietary supplements are mostly either illegal or subject to
strict regulatory controls in the vast majority of countries.
Unsurprisingly, therefore, rather than making it easier for
dietary supplement manufacturers to print lifesaving
information on their product labels, the current draft of
these Recommendations appears to have been prepared in such a
way as to allow the current unacceptably restrictive
regulatory controls to be enforced still further.
The European Commission delegate famously
stated at the 2003 meeting of the CCNFSDU that health claims
for vitamin and mineral supplements should be prohibited.
Given therefore that the CCNFSDU Chairman stated at the same
meeting that drugs are to mitigate and prevent diseases, and
that the role of food supplements is to support the diet, the
type of world that Codex envisages is now becoming
increasingly apparent.
Discussion Paper
on Risk Analysis
This CCNFSDU Discussion Paper is
particularly crucial to the future development of the
Guidelines for Vitamin and Mineral Food Supplements, as the
Guidelines state that the upper safe levels of vitamins and
minerals in supplements will be established by scientific risk
assessment. Notably therefore, when this issue was discussed
at last year's CCNFSDU meeting, the
committee indicated that it would be dealing with the “over
dosage of nutrients.” The content of this year’s Discussion
Paper continues in much the same vein, making it abundantly
clear that the CCNFSDU will be treating vitamins and minerals
as dangerous chemicals, as opposed to essential dietary
elements. Until such time as this approach changes, therefore,
our health and our freedoms will continue to remain seriously
at risk.
The agenda items and documents discussed
above can be downloaded from
www.codexalimentarius.net/download/report/646/nf27_01e.pdf