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"hysterical
phytophobia"
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MD Hysteria Against Herbs Reaches Epidemic Proportions: Threatens Nation's Health by Alan Tillotson, Ph.D. August 2, 2000 For Immediate Release A mass epidemic of hysteria against common
plants used for health purposes has emerged over the past year.
The new syndrome is being labeled hysterical phytophobia. In a typical case, a Wilmington, Delaware neurologist was shown a list of plant medicines given to an elderly patient by a professional herbalist, and promptly wrote a letter to her family physician saying that one of the herbs could be fatal. It turned out that the herbalist had given the woman ginseng root in small dosage, appropriate for her age and symptom picture. The neurologist, with no background or training in herbal medicine, misread Chinese ginseng root (Panax ginseng) for jimson weed (Datura stramonium), a toxic plant which contains the alkaloids atropine, hyoscyamine, and scopolamine, and is not commercially available. News reports reporting an article in the March 1999 edition of the journal Fertility and Sterility, stated that St. John’s Wort (Hypericum perforatum), echinacea (Echinacea species) and ginkgo leaf (Ginkgo biloba) might have a negative impact on human fertility. Researchers from the Loma Linda University School of Medicine in California had reported that directly dosing human sperm with large amounts of these herbs in the test tube caused the sperm to lose its ability to penetrate hamster eggs. The lead author of the study, Richard R. Ondrizek, M.D. was upset and "flabbergasted" that his research was being used in the media to promote the idea that these herbs could cause infertility in humans. In February, 2000, Reuters reported that
juice derived from the fruit of the Noni tree (Morinda citrifolia),
The New England Journal of Medicine reported
last week that dietary supplements may contain a variety of
The current outbreak of hysterical phytophobia is believed by observers to have originated from a cumulative effect caused by press releases over the past year attacking DSHEA, the law which governs dietary supplements, and which removed some power from the FDA due to past abuses. In its later stages, hysterical phytophobia victims have been known to go on camera with eyes bulging and bodies gyrating while they repeat a litany of charges against herbal medicines, most of which have been discredited in the past, some of which stem back more than 10 years. The disease also cause a form of selective amnesia/dementia, whereupon victims seem completely unaware of the thousands of safety studies and placebo-controlled studies clearly showing a high benefit to risk ratio for most herbs and supplements. They also seem unable to mathematically calculate the vast numerical difference between the thousands of victims of modern pharmaceutical medicine and the handful of victims of natural medicines. For example, the worst estimates of "dangerous herbs" estimates they may kill 50 Americans a year, while pharmaceuticals routinely kill 140,000 Americans a year (according to JAMA 1997), making herbs approximately 2,800 times safer than pharmaceuticals. Put another way, since one Americans dies from pharmaceuticals every three hours, at least two will expire during the average time spent writing an article attacking herbs. There is currently no known cure for hysterical
phytophobia. Some observers point out that there are rare remissions which
seem to occur when physicians themselves are struck by severe illness,
and forced to
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