fw:

Sardi asks a very good question at the end of his article:
he wants to know  why there has been NO EFFORT on the part
of CRN, NNFA, so called "Citizens  for Health" or other
supposed "Health Freedom Organizations" world wide to bring
the information contained within his article (below) to
light? Could it be that many such groups are actually
controlled opposition groups being paid off by
pharmaceutical interests to do NOTHING to stop this
attempted genocide? All evidence indicates that this is the
case. A quick perusal of the CRN website's membership
section at http://www.crnusa.org/2members.html indicates
MASSIVE conflict of interest within that body as Bayer,
BASF, Monsanto, Cargill, Archers Daniels Midland, Hoffman La
Roche, SmithKline Beecham, and numerous other pharmaceutical
companies belong to this supposed "vitamin" trade
association.  NNFA is caught in a very similar conflict of
interest as is supposed "Citizens for Health". Is our health
freedom being hijacked? In another 5 months, unless massive
grass roots opposition can be mustered within the EU, all 15
EU countries will soon walk in lockstep with Germany and
France, and the USA could be set up like a bowling pin at
Codex in 2002. 

You think your access to dietary supplements is secure here
in the USA or  anywhere else in the world? Better think
again! Jeanne Grimmett of the  Congressional Research
Service published an article titled "Dispute  Settlement"
which documents the fact that NONE of our (US) domestic laws
is  safe from harmonization to rapidly emerging
international standards, most  of which go diametrically
against the environment and against the public  health. 

THE PERILS AND PITFALLS OF HARMONIZED FOOD SUPPLEMENTS
STATEMENT REGARDING THE ESTABLISHMENT OF TOLERABLE UPPER
LIMITS AND DOSAGE HARMONIZATION OF FOOD SUPPLEMENTS 

By Bill Sardi Copyright 2000 Knowledge of Health, Inc. You
may circulate this document on the Internet. But it is not
to be re-produced or distributed for commercial purposes or
posted on the Internet without permission. 

The dietary supplements sector-working group of the Trans
Atlantic Business Dialogue (TABD), composed of manufacturers
of nutritional supplements, has agreed to "harmonize the
regulatory framework for vitamin and mineral food
supplements on both sides of the Atlantic." (Statement from
the www.crnusa.org website) The fact that the
food-supplement industry has embraced the idea of "maximum
levels" for food supplements is of serious concern to every
health-conscious consumer. 

There are a number of concerns regarding the establishment
of "maximum levels" for nutritional supplements. These are: 

1. The establishment of "tolerable upper limits" may assume
there are no health benefits, and only undesirable side
effects, beyond a certain point of consumption. No mention
is made of a therapeutic range. For example, some heart
disease patients take 3200 units of vitamin E, which exceeds
current maximum recommendations. 

2. The establishment of "tolerable upper limits" for
developed Atlantic nations is likely to be adopted as a
world standard, since consumers in many undeveloped
countries consider western-made products to be superior.
However, the nutritional needs of human populations vary.
Factors such as age, sex, geography, skin pigmentation,
season, health habits (tobacco and alcohol consumption),
nutrient soil levels, cultural dietary practices, dependence
upon processed foods, prescription drug usage, individual
health status and other factors may not be encompassed by a
one-size fits all "upper limits" standard. For example, the
safe range for vitamin D consumption is not likely to be
sufficient to prevent immune system dysfunction among Blacks
living in northern climates in winter months (dark skin
pigmentation reduces natural vitamin D production).
Likewise, the safe upper limit may not accommodate the! need
for folic acid by fertile Caucasian females living in
equatorial climates (solar ultraviolet radiation
significantly reduces folic acid levels among light-skinned
individuals). 

3. There is concern that "tolerable upper limits" will be
intentionally set at levels that will be below therapeutic
dosages. Consumers are fully aware that pervasive
pharmaceutical interests, which exert influence through
corporate ownership or material supply, may sway "upper
tolerable limits" in food supplements so as not to compete
with prescription drugs. The public is aware that the
biological action of virtually every prescription drug can
be duplicated with nutritional supplements and that the
therapeutic effect of many nutrients depends upon dosage. 

4. The fact that a profit-minded group of manufacturers is
entrusted with the establishment of such an important
standard is questionable on its face. Manufacturers may not
represent the interests of consumers who desire to use food
supplements as part of a health maintenance regimen. The
validity of an "upper limits" standard may later be called
into question should the public not have a voice in their
formation. For example, a court recently threw out the
well-publicized food pyramid when its authors were found to
have conflicts of interest with food suppliers. Without
notice or ample opportunity for public comment, the National
Academy of Sciences recently introduced tolerable upper
limits for antioxidant vitamins. These maximal limits were
apparently established without scientific consensus (see the
report below on vitamin C). 

5. The establishment of "tolerable upper limits" is likely
to be based upon outdated or inaccurate information.
Recently published scientific studies indicate the daily
dosage levels for vitamin B12, vitamin D, iron, calcium,
folic acid, and other nutrients may need to be re-evaluated.
There is concern that the latest science may not be included
in the development of the maximum nutrient levels. 

For example, much of the information provided in nutritional
textbooks, regarding vitamins A and D is outdated. 

Consumers are mistakenly warned by the US Food and Drug
Administration that excessive vitamin A supplementation can
produce a toxic liver buildup. However, an estimated 30-60
cases of vitamin A overdose are reported annually, while
over a million older Americans report symptoms of night
vision problems due to a lack of vitamin A. Cases of
liver/vitamin A toxicity often involve alcoholics and others
who have liver disease. Vitamin A toxicity is completely
reversible. The US FDA has only chosen to warn doctors and
consumers of the potential for vitamin A overdose without a
balanced reporting on vitamin A deficiencies. The only
reported case of mortality from vitamin A toxicity involved
a hunter in Canada who consumed bear liver, which provided
over 1 million units of vitamin A. There is concern over
birth defects with high-dose vitamin A supplementation, but
conflicting studies are still a pu! zzlement. 

Due to the potential risk of liver buildup, the US FDA
restricts vitamin supplements to no more than 1000
international units of vitamin D per pill. However, blood
levels of vitamin D do not even rise till 5000 units is
consumed, and the full-body skin exposure to midday sunlight
in a mid-equatorial zone in the summer would produce 10,000
units of vitamin D, which completely confounds any notion
that vitamin D is toxic. Toxicity from vitamin D does not
begin till 40,000 units of vitamin D are consumed daily for
an extended period of time. [American Journal Clinical
Nutrition 69: 842-56, 1999] Doctors used to inject 50,000
units of vitamin D for therapeutic purposes. Vitamin D3 is
the proper form of vitamin D for human nutrition. The
inferior form of vitamin D, vitamin D2, is provided in milk.
[Am Journal Clinical Nutrition 68: 854-88, 1998] 

6. The exclusion of certain nutrients from the "maximum
level" list may unfairly infer that they are not necessary
for human nutrition. There is evidence that certain
nutrients should be added to the list of essential life
factors. This list may include nutrients such as lutein,
sulfur, phytic acid/inositol hexaphosphate (IP6), essential
fatty acids, and others. 

There is no daily requirement established for essential
omega-3 fatty acids, even though 8 in 10 Americans do not
consume adequate amounts of these fats. Omega-3s are
required for maintenance of the nervous system (myelin
sheath), production of hormones, reduction of inflammation,
lining of the retinal photoreceptors, control of
triglycerides and regulation of immune system. An estimated
20 percent of Americans do not exhibit detectable levels of
omega-3 fatty acids in their tissues. Essential omega-3 fats
have been removed from eggs, meat, grain and even fish. This
is largely a result of the use of feeding pens for
domesticated animals. Chickens, turkeys, hogs and steers are
all fed corn meal rather than foraging in the wild for foods
that are a source of omega-3 fatty acids. Grass-fed animal
meat will provide a sign! ificant amount of omega-3 fatty
acids, whereas animals sent to the feeding pen two weeks
prior to slaughter will provide little or no omega-3 fatty
acids and plentiful amounts of saturated fat.
[www.eatwild.com] 

The widespread use of processed grains also eliminates
omega-3s from the human food chain. Cereals and grains are
engineered for storage, not human nutrition. 

Finally, the practice of fish farming prevents fish from
acquiring the phytoplanktons that are the source of omega-3s
for waterborne animals. The result is an omega-3 nutritional
deficiency that is of epidemic proportion. Nearly every
human being now must supplement their diet to acquire
maintenance levels of omega-3 fatty acids. For health
officials to ignore this nutritional deficiency is akin to
ignoring outbreaks of pellagra and beri beri over a century
ago. 

The need for omega-3 fats is particularly critical among
newborns, even more so among premies. Currently, infant
formulas do not provide these essential fats, though the
Food & Drug Administration is soon due to make a statement
regarding the provision of omega-3 fats in infant formulas. 

There is also no daily requirement for sulfur, a mineral
required for the production of glutathione, the major
antioxidant produced within all living cells (plants,
insects, animals, humans). Glutathione consumption from
foods ranges from 25-125 milligrams per day. With the
provision of sufficient amounts of sulfur, the liver will
produce far more glutathione (up to 14,000 milligrams per
day) than what the diet provides. Sulfur-rich foods (garlic,
eggs, asparagus, onions) may be lacking in various diets and
the provision of sulfur in food supplements (sulfur-bearing
amino acids like N-acetyl cysteine, taurine, and lipoic
acid) or glutathione itself, may be advantageous. 

There is now ample evidence that lutein, a cousin of beta
carotene, is essential for maintenance of the human visual
system. Lutein requirements increase dramatically among
blue-eyed individuals who have far less of this antioxidant
pigment at the back of their eyes than brown-eyed
individuals and are at a 2000% increased risk of developing
loss of central vision (macular degeneration) in their
lifetime. Lutein is not currently considered an essential
nutrient. It is unlikely that the at-risk population will
consume the 3-5 weekly servings of spinach or kale
(equivalent to 6 milligrams of daily lutein), required to
prevent ocular disease. [Journal Am Medical Assn 272:
1413-20, 1994] Lutein food supplements appear to be
practical and economical. 

When husks (bran) were separated from rice, the B vitamins
were removed, which led to deficiency diseases of pellagra
and beri beri. However, in addition to B vitamins, these
rice polishings (bran) provided phytic acid (IP6), also
called inositol hexaphosphate, an important mineral binder
and antioxidant. [Free Radical Biology Medicine 8: 61-69,
1990; J Biological Chemistry 262: 11647-50, 1987] IP6 is
found in every living cell in the body and is also an
important second messenger for the nervous system. The low
consumption of whole grains has led to reduced consumption
of IP6 and the development of iron, copper and calcium
overload diseases (hemochromatosis, Wilson's disease, kidney
stones, mitral valve, calcium cataracts) and other
iron-overload sequelae such as hypertension,
atherosclerosis, brain disorders, liver disease, colon
cancer and other maladies. IP6-phytic acid has been
mistakenly br! anded as an anti-nutrient because it
interferes with mineral absorption among growing children.
Nutritionists fail to recognize that most of the anemia in
developing countries is caused by intestinal parasites, not
the lack of iron, and that nature favors iron anemia over
iron overload, since iron is a major growth factor for
bacteria, viruses, fungi and tumor cells. Bran has never
been fully restored to the food supply, and the world is
still suffering from deficiency diseases. 

7. There is concern that the establishment of "tolerable
upper limits" would cause some consumers to needlessly seek
the counsel of a physician or other health professional when
high-dose vitamin usage is in question. Doctors are solely
oriented to prescribe prescription drugs and are notoriously
known to harbor prejudices against food supplements. Despite
their theoretical widespread application in disease
prevention and treatment, less than 1 percent of all
doctors' prescriptions are for nutritional supplements. 

8. There is concern that high-dose pills would only be
available via a doctor's prescription, which would raise
costs to consumers. Nutritional supplements that are sold
without prescription in the USA are only available through a
doctor's prescription in many other countries. If employed
in the USA, this practice would serve to drive up consumer
costs and stunt the practice of self care and preventive
care. 

9. There is concern that the establishment of a "tolerable
upper limit," without accompanying information regarding the
type, severity and reversibility of any side effects, would
induce undue alarm among consumers. For example, if a
consumer is only informed of a maximum level of consumption
and no further information is provided, then the consumer
may be misled into thinking potential side effects are of a
serious, or even lethal, nature. Specifically, if an upper
limit of consumption is established for magnesium, and
excessive dosage may produce known symptoms of "loose
stool," then this fact should be provided to consumers with
the notation that the remedy is to reduce the dosage and
that this symptom is completely reversible. Similarly,
excessive consumption of vitamin C may produce temporary
symptoms of diarrhea, a symptom that is completely
reversible with discontinuance or reduced dosage. &nbs!
p;Other examples of reversible side effects are  neuropathy
from high-dose vitamin B6 (pyridoxine), nausea from
high-dose iron, facial flushing from high-dose niacin, and
headaches and breast tenderness from high-dose vitamin E. 

10. There is concern that once maximal limits are
established, and the concept has been adopted, it will be
easy to arbitrarily change the numbers. 

11. There is concern that health care consumers have no
unbiased governing bodies to turn to in regards to
accessibility to food supplements. As stated above,
physicians have inherent conflicts of interest since
nutritional supplements currently do not require their
prescription. There has been continued reluctance by the
National Academy of Sciences, the National Institutes of
Health, the Food & Drug Administration, and other
governmental health offices, to endorse habitual use of food
supplements. Dietary practices (fruits and vegetables) and
food fortification are favored over supplementation. The new
standard is likely to stop short of supplementation in favor
of dietary consumption at the low end, and will stop short
of therapeutic action at the top range. 

The cost of non-supplementation 

Only recently did the US Food & Drug Administration concede
to demands for more folic acid via food fortification. Foot
dragging on folic acid led to many more babies being born
with birth defects. 

After spending millions of dollars, the Five-A-Day program,
promoted by the National Institutes of Health, is a failure.
Repeated studies indicate only a minority of the population
consumes the recommended five servings of fresh fruits and
vegetables on a daily basis. After repeated public
information campaigns aimed at increasing the consumption of
fruits and vegetables, the proportion of adults who actually
say they consume 5 servings of plant foods a day only
increased from 19 to 23 percent from 1990 to 1996. [Am
Journal Public Health 90: 777-81, 2000] Nutritional
supplementation may be a practical and economic way of
filling nutritional gaps in the population at large. 

The reluctance of the US health authorities to endorse food
supplements in favor of plant-food diets and food
fortification is costing the US health care system dearly. 

The Western Journal of Medicine reports that the provision
of folic acid and zinc containing multivitamins by all women
of childbearing age, and daily supplementation of vitamin E
for adults over age 50, would reduce hospital charges by $20
billion annually. [Western Journal Medicine 166: 306-12,
1997] If all at-risk Americans took the recommended amounts
of vitamin supplements, the managed care industry would save
approximately $5.5 billion. [Managed Care Interface 11:
95-99, 1998] The National Defense Council Foundation
indicates the provision of food supplements to active and
retired military personnel would reduce health care costs by
$6.3 billion annually. [Press Release May 22, 1997] 

While pharmaceutical companies lure retirees into lobbying
for a national prescription drug program, they are never
told that nutritional supplements will do far more to
promote health, without the side effects and costs of
prescription drugs. 

12. There is concern that maximal upper limits may not
accommodate the nutritional needs of specific organs in the
body. Nutritional authorities have given too much attention
to achieving minimal and maximal blood levels of nutrients,
which may not be an adequate measure of nutrients in
specific tissues. For example, it has been stated that the
blood circulation becomes saturated with vitamin C at about
240 milligrams. Even when saturation has been achieved in
the blood plasma, the provision of 2000 milligrams of
vitamin C further increases the levels of vitamin C in the
aqueous fluid of the human eye by 35 percent. Higher levels
of vitamin C are required in the aqueous fluid of the eye
than in the blood circulation because the human eye is
transparent and is prone to harm by products of oxidation
(hydrogen peroxide) emanating from exposure to solar
ultraviolet radiation. Much higher levels of v! itamin C are
required to prevent cataracts than to prevent scurvy. The
daily amount of vitamin C required to prevent cataracts is
in the range of 300-2000 milligrams (the equivalent of 6-30
oranges), which exceeds the best dietary consumption (about
200-250 milligrams from consumption of five servings of
fruits and vegetables). The National Academy of Sciences
(NAS) now considers 2000 milligrams of vitamin C as "toxic."
[See my addendum regarding the issuance of new
recommendations for antioxidants by the NAS below.] The
human eye has greater need for vitamin C, lutein, vitamin E,
glutathione and vitamin A, than most other tissues in the
body. 

13. There is concern that food fortification may be offered
as an option to the establishment of higher therapeutic
doses of supplemental vitamins and minerals. However, food
fortification may not be adequate in all instances. The
National Academy of Sciences recently reported that
Americans fall short of magnesium requirements by about 200
milligrams per day. It is difficult to fortify food with
this bulky mineral, and it is not easily incorporated into
flour and bread. Only bottled water provides a medium for
the delivery of magnesium in the diet. Thus supplementation
rather than food fortification may be required to meet human
needs. Furthermore, where foods are heated prior to
consumption, nutrient values may be diminished. Consider
that flour and cereals are now being fortified with higher
levels of folic acid, a B vitamin known to prevent birth
defects among newborns (spina  bifida). But folic acid, as
well as all B vitamins, is easily destroyed by heat from
baking or toasting. Food fortification is a success, but it
may not prevent all nutritional shortages. 

Why no opposition to harmonization? 

Why has there been no opposition to the harmonization of
dietary supplements? The dietary supplements sector working
group of the Trans Atlantic Business Dialogue, Citizens for
Health, the Council for Responsible Nutrition, the National
Nutritional Foods Association, and other organizations, have
not voiced serious objection to the establishment of
tolerable upper limits of nutritional supplements. This goes
unexplained. Either ignorance or conflicts of interest
within these organizations, has resulted in inaction and a
lock-step movement towards the establishment of "tolerable
upper limits." Vital health freedoms are about to be swept
under the bus in the name of harmonization. 

Summary 

Centuries ago mankind could only dream of finding remedies
that would prevent infections, eradicate blinding cataracts,
avert heart stoppage, hinder tumors, and forestall aging.
Now that mankind has discovered that these health benefits
are achieved through the provision of concentrated
nutritional factors, the idea to establish harmonized
dosages runs contrary to the progress of western
civilization. Consumer access to high-dose vitamin and
mineral supplements may save the economies of western
civilizations. 

Addendum 

Previously published in Whole Foods Magazine 

Recently the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) issued
dietary antioxidant recommendations. The new recommendations
call for 90 mg. for vitamin C for healthy adults, up from 60
mg per day under the previous standard. Yet the government
keeps preaching five servings of fresh fruits and
vegetables, which supplies more than 200 mg. of vitamin C.
[Am J Clin Nut 62: 1347-56S, 1995] These two figures don't
correlate. Just months before the 90 mg vitamin C
recommendation was issued, various government scientists
were calling for 120-200 mg per day in published reports.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci 93: 3704-09, 1996; Nutrition Reviews 57:
222-24, 1999; Am J Clin Nut 69: 1086-1107, 1999] One
researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
Laboratory of Human Nutrition, using a technique called
saturation kinetics, suggested that even the 200-mg level
was not adequate to meet individual vitamin! C needs by as
much as 2-3 fold. [Proc Natl Acad Sci 93: 14344,48, 1996] 

While the Food & Nutrition Board suggested adding another 35
mg of vitamin C for smokers (125 mg total), researchers at
the Medical College of Wisconsin found that it takes 200 mg
of vitamin C before smokers achieve the same serum levels of
ascorbic acid as non-smokers. [Am J Clin Nut 53: 1466-70,
1991] Other investigators have called for 200-mg daily
consumption of vitamin C for smokers. [Ann NY Acad Sci 686:
335-46, 1993] Swedish investigators demonstrated that a
single 2000 mg dose of vitamin C can completely abolish the
typical reduction in blood circulation that occurs while
smoking a cigarette. A 1000 mg dose had no effect.
[Microvascular Res 58: 305-11, 1999] 

What happened to these recommendations? The NAS
recommendations conveniently stopped short of recommending
levels of vitamin C that would require supplementation. The
Academy of Sciences set the tolerable upper limit at 2000
mg, but a recent review indicated doses of vitamin C up to
4000 mg. are well tolerated. [Nut Rev 57: 71-77, 1999] Eight
placebo-controlled, double-blind studies and six non-placebo
clinical trials in which up to 10,000 mg of vitamin C was
consumed daily for up to 3 years confirm the safety of
vitamin C in high doses. [J Am Coll Nut 14: 124-36, 1995]
Yet the headline in the press release from the National
Academy of Sciences concerning antioxidants read "huge doses
considered risky." 

Furthermore, Maret Traber PhD, a member of the NAS panel,
says there is "no evidence that proves antioxidant
supplements will help people live better longer." [Whole
Foods Magazine, August 2000] Really? There was a UCLA study,
which showed that greater than 300 mg of daily vitamin C
increases the male life span by six years, a report that was
widely reported in Newsweek and other periodicals.
[Epidemiology 3: 194-202, 1992] A recent study confirms that
finding. [Epidemiology 11: 440-45, 2000] 

Furthermore, one study shows that about 294 mg of vitamin C
significantly decreases the risk of cataracts compared to 77
mg. per day (about the level set by the Academy of
Sciences). [Clin Chem 39: 1305, 1993] To get that much
vitamin C a person would have to consume 5 oranges per day.
Daily consumption of vitamin C supplements for 10 years or
more results in a 77-83 percent reduction in the prevalence
of cataracts. [Am J Clin Nut 66: 911-16, 1997] 

One of the fallacies of current vitamin C research is the
use of blood serum levels as the gold standard for
establishing recommended daily consumption levels. A 1991
study, conducted at the USDA Human Nutrition Research Center
on Aging at Tufts University, found that there were
"striking differences" in ocular levels of vitamin C among
older adults who consume 148 mg of vitamin C from their
daily diet (which is 2.5 times the old 60 mg RDA and 1.6
times the current 90 mg recommendation) compared to adults
who took 2000 mg daily from supplements. The level of
vitamin C in the focusing lens and aqueous fluid of the eye
increased by 22-32 percent with consumption of 2000 mg of
daily vitamin C supplementation, which affords protection
against cataracts. Thus the idea that vitamin C levels reach
a saturation point at about 240 mg in the blood serum, and
that additional vitamin C is worthless and only washes out
i! n the urine, is dispelled by this research. [Current Eye
Research 8: 751-59, 1991] This is the same level of vitamin
C that the National Academy of Sciences now considers
"risky." [NAS press release April 10, 2000] 

The message the National Academy of Sciences sends is always
the same, regardless of the evidence, which is that you can
get all the nutrients you need from your diet, not pills.
But this recommendation comes with asterisks. The fine print
reads that the NAS recommendation is only for healthy
individuals, and it only spells out "the minimum amount of a
nutrient that has beneficial health effects." The NAS says
the effects of antioxidants are "promising but unproven." 

How much evidence is enough? The answers provided by the NAS
Food and Nutrition Board members amount to doublespeak. The
discussion becomes almost unintelligible with all the talk
about daily value, Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA), USRDA,
daily reference intake (DRI) and tolerable upper level.
Which consumer, let alone rocket scientist, can decipher
these standards so they can make an intelligent health
decision? 

One assumption is that people don't need antioxidant
supplement until they become unhealthy. But the Journal of
the American Medical Association admits the destructive
process of oxidation is involved in virtually every disease.
[J Am Med Assn 271: 1148-49, 1994] Aging, disease and
antioxidant status often parallel each other. Living tissues
slowly age or wear out, they don't become ill overnight. For
example, the focusing lens of the human eye loses about 1
percent of its clarity for every year of life. Cataract
formation is universal and slowly progressive with advancing
age. By age 60 only about 35 percent of light reaches the
retina. By age 85 a person needs a 250-watt light bulb to
see what they saw with a 60-watt light bulb when they were
20 years old. The level of vitamin C in the lens of the eye
has been correlated with severity of cataract. [Internatl J
Vitamin ! Nutr Res 68: 309-15, 1998] If an individual
consumes the minimum amount of vitamin C that produces
healthful benefits (90 mg. per day by the NAS standards),
and waits till they develop a cataract to take more vitamin
C, it will probably be too late to reverse a cataract. About
300-2000 mg per day of vitamin C would be required to
prevent cataracts, according to the data at hand. 

NAS panel member Maret Traber, Ph.D., says "it was
disappointing that the news media focused on the 'new' upper
limits for vitamin C, vitamin E and selenium, rather than
the 'new requirements'." But it was the NAS themselves who
chose to issue a press release that carried the headline
"Antioxidants' role in chronic disease prevention still
uncertain; huge doses considered risky." Their own press
release didn't emphasize the fact that their report called
for an increase in the daily intake of vitamins C and E. The
NAS can't entirely shift the blame onto the news media.
While these experts admit that the news media mistakenly
emphasized the tolerable-upper limits issued by the NAS
panel of experts, the panel members apparently did nothing
to correct the problem either. They could have written to
the news media. Apparently none did. #### 

Copyright 2000 Bill Sardi Knowledge of Health, Inc.




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