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UK medicines regulator explains ‘Echinacea in kids’ warning
09 October 2012
ANH-Intl evaluates MHRA responses to its questions
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ANH-Europe Campaign Feature: UK authorities go after Echinacea for kids
12 September 2012
Help force the UK and Irish regulators to reverse unjustified Echinacea decision
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Underhand herbal food supplement ban by Irish regulator
04 February 2015
Does the recent Irish consultation on herbs put a spanner in the works for a liberal EU marketplace for herbal food supplements?
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ANH-Intl Feature: UK medicines regulator and trade association collaborate in online herbal bust
11 March 2015
Why the latest challenge by UK regulators represents a protectionist measure and a slippery slope that must be curtailed to protect consumer freedom of choice
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Poland joins the EU firing squad with food supplements in its sights
17 March 2008
Poland has recently established a government-backed panel to develop the criteria needed to classify a range of nutrients into two groups to be dealt with under either food or medicines law. And Belgium states it will be reclassifying botanicals such as echinacea and gingko as medicinal.
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Your Health Show, Dublin
23 October 2004
Don't miss Ireland's annual natural products show.
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Herbs May Help Ease Children's Ills
18 March 2005
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Certain herbal supplements show promise for treating children's colds, skin allergies and sleep problems, according to a new research review.
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Herbs May Help Ease Children's Ills (1)
10 October 2007
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Certain herbal supplements show promise for treating children's colds, skin allergies and sleep problems, according to a new research review.
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The FSA fingers Pan Pharmaceutical products in the UK (1)
10 October 2007
The second largest formulator of dietary supplements in the world feels the pain globally, after its license was suspended in Australia in late April. It is widely felt in industry circles that this suspension was overly harsh, particularly considering that the quality control problems that initiated the ban were primarily confined to a pharmaceutical product, rather than natural healthcare products which form the mainstay of the company's business. The ban has already resulted in the withdrawal of some 1500 healthcare products in Australia.
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So where have all the flowers gone . . . (1)
10 October 2007
The EU Traditional Herbal Medicinal Products Directive will come into effect on October 31. To register their products, manufacturers have until 2011 to produce a dossier that proves the efficacy of the remedies or they will no longer be able to sell them in the EU.