Products such as Himalaya salt, ginger tea, green tea, and
fish oils are among the 156 health products that Danish food
authorities have just recently banned as dietary supplements
on the Danish market. These products are being reclassified
as medicines because the manufacturers either made health
claims or, in response to the regulators’ questions, have
truthfully responded as to the benefits of these products.
Fortunately, thanks to company, consumer, and Danish
activists’ persistent complaints to the food authorities,
129 of these 156 health products have now received a
temporary reprieve in the form of permission to remain on
the health-food market while the Danish Medicines Agency
completes its approval of their registration as medicines.
But the basic problem remains.
By comparison, the food authorities in the United Kingdom
are much more service minded. If a supplement manufacturer
there makes a health claim for one of its products that is
noncompliant with the law, then the UK authorities will the
manufacturer a warning and allow it a certain amount of time
to correct the problem. But in Denmark there was no such
courtesy extended, the 156 health products were simply
banned outright and ordered off the market!
While the noose is tightening in the European Union for
dietary supplements, in Denmark times are even tougher.
Taking almost a perverse pleasure in it, the Danish Food
Administration is doing what it can to make life difficult
for the small- and medium-sized health-products companies.
Since these smaller companies are unable to afford the
heavy expenses involved in reclassifying their products
and/or compiling documentation for their products’
registration as medicines, their products will simply
disappear. I guess the Danish economy is doing so
marvelously well that Denmark doesn’t need the many jobs and
income created by the health-food companies, nor does the
country mind the increased healthcare costs it will have to
pay because more people get sick from lack of proper
prevention.
In theory, you are allowed to sell dietary supplements in
Denmark if you do not make any health claims connected with
them. But if a supplement is effective for anything at all
(and which one isn’t, otherwise why sell it in the first
place?), then the producer is now told to document the basis
for that effect and reclassify the supplement as a medicine.
This new regulation is not at all in compliance with the EU
Food Supplements Directive (FSD), which it is supposed to
be, because the FSD actually defines food supplements as
being a supplement to foods having a physiological effect!
However, the new Danish regulation is really tracking the
new, all-encompassing definition of a medicine found in the
EU’s Pharmaceutical Directive. The Danish regulators are
leaping ahead in anticipation of even harsher
anti-supplement provisions. And in doing so, they are
showing all of us here in Europe what we can expect further
down the road – more ill-health and even less sanity.