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Polity
Article by: Bloomberg Published: 29 Aug 2006
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| Manto breaking law with Aids claim - Sama |
Health Minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang is breaking the law by
making unproven claims about the effectiveness of alternative
"treatments" for Aids, according to the South African Medical
Association.
In a statement on behalf of the association, Sama chairman Dr Kgosi
Letlape said any claims of therapeutic effectiveness made without
clinical trials and approval by the Medicines Control Council were
illegal.
"I implore the minister to refrain from breaking the laws of the
country," he said.
"In terms of the laws of this country anything considered
therapeutic should be registered for that purpose, and people have
to submit proof that it is therapeutic.
"And until that is done, you cannot go onto public fora and claim
that it is therapeutic."
Tshabalala-Msimang has been dubbed "Dr Beetroot" because of her
advocacy of a beetroot, garlic and lemon diet for people with Aids.
Over recent weeks, there have been repeated calls on President
Thabo Mbeki to sack her, both for her views and for what Aids
activists say is her lack of action on a comprehensive national
treatment plan. Letlape said there was no current scientifically
proven alternative to antiretrovirals in the treatment of Aids
patients with weakened immune systems.
"Antiretroviral medication is the only treatment that is
scientifically proven to prolong the lives of people with Aids," he
said.
He also said it was regrettable that Tshabalala-Msimang continued
to misrepresent the facts about the role of nutrition in the
management of Aids.
"The medical profession fully acknowledges the known fact that
optimal nutrition is important and beneficial to everybody.
"However the ministers emphasis of the exaggerated value of
nutrition as a preferential means to manage and treat Aids is
confusing a vulnerable public." (Sapa ) |