Welcome
to DrugNatural! My name is Darshana Vaishnav. I am a board
certified medical doctor and after over 20 years of medical
practice, I have set up this site to facilitate, and for the
benefit of, our community so that the community members can
maintain vibrant health and lead a long healthy life.
We want to be your favorite website for the need of your
family for vitamins, herbal, and dietary supplements. The
only way we know how to be your favorite website is by maintaining
the highest level of integrity and by offering you the best
quality vitamins, herbal, and dietary supplements at competitive
prices in a secure and confidential environment. We will
never disclose your personal information to a third party
without your written authorization. We will not be satisfied
until you are!
Most of our vitamin, herbal, and dietary supplement offerings
are available only from physicians, naturopaths, pharmacies
or other healthcare providers. We carry only the highly reputed
and effective brand-name natural, Ayurvedic and Homeopathic products.
Each and every product formula we offer has been extensively
researched and developed by its manufacturer and is constantly
reviewed for improvements. These products are then manufactured
in accordance with Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) to ensure
the highest standards, quality and consistency, and also
tested to work in harmony with your body's natural rhythm
to regenerate and heal itself. DrugNatural™ offers
products that combine the benefits of purity, nature and
science.
We are a strong believer in family values and our website
is safe for all visitors. However, we do not accept or process
orders from those under the age of 18. We therefore kindly
request that adults place any orders for products that their
children wish to purchase.
We are constantly adding new products to our website. If
you have any recommendations for new products or questions
on products we carry, please send us an email with your recommendations
or questions.
If you have any feedback on improvements of our website,
please do not hesitate to let us know. Send us an email with
your feedback in detail.
An FDA Guide to Dietary Supplements
Dietary supplements are some of the hottest selling items on the market today.
Surveys show that more than half of the U.S. adult population uses these products.
In 1996 alone, consumers spent more than $6.5 billion on dietary supplements,
according to Packaged Facts, Inc., a market research firm in New York City.
But even with all the business they generate,
consumers still ask questions about dietary
supplements: Can their claims be trusted?
Are they safe? Does the Food and Drug Administration
approve them?
Many of these questions come in the wake
of the 1994 Dietary Supplement Health and
Education Act, or DSHEA, which set up a new
framework for FDA regulation of dietary supplements.
It also created an office in the National
Institutes of Health to coordinate research
on dietary supplements, and it called on
President Clinton to set up an independent
dietary supplement commission to report on
the use of claims in dietary supplement labeling.
In passing DSHEA, Congress recognized first,
that many people believe dietary supplements
offer health benefits and second, that consumers
want a greater opportunity to determine whether
supplements may help them. The law essentially
gives dietary supplement manufacturers freedom
to market more products as dietary supplements
and provide information about their products'
benefits--for example, in product labeling.
The Council for Responsible
Nutrition, an organization of manufacturers
of dietary supplements and their suppliers,
welcomes the change. "Our philosophy has been ...
to maintain consumer access to products and
access to information [so that consumers
can] make informed choices," says John Cordaro,
the group's president and chief executive
officer.
But in choosing whether to use dietary supplements,
FDA answers consumers' questions by noting
that under DSHEA, FDA's requirement for premarket
review of dietary supplements is less than
that over other products it regulates, such
as drugs and many additives used in conventional
foods.
This means that consumers and manufacturers
have responsibility for checking the safety
of dietary supplements and determining the
truthfulness of label claims.
Anatomy of the Requirements for Dietary Supplement Labels
Information that will be required on the
labels of dietary supplements includes:
- Statement of identity (e.g., "ginseng")
- Net quantity of contents (e.g., "60
capsules")
- Structure-function claim and the statement "This
statement has not been evaluated by the
Food and Drug Administration. This product
is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure,
or prevent any disease."
- Directions for use (e.g., "Take one
capsule daily.")
- Supplement Facts panel (lists serving
size, amount, and active ingredient)
- Other ingredients in descending order
of predominance and by common name or
proprietary blend.
- Name and place of business of manufacturer,
packer or distributor. This is the address
to write for more product information.
For more info, see link, dietary
supplement labels in PDF format
What Is a Dietary Supplement?
Traditionally, dietary supplements referred
to products made of one or more of the
essential nutrients, such as vitamins,
minerals, and protein. But DSHEA broadens
the definition to include, with some exceptions,
any product intended for ingestion as
a supplement to the diet. This includes
vitamins; minerals; herbs, botanicals,
and other plant-derived substances; and
amino acids (the individual building
blocks of protein) and concentrates,
metabolites, constituents and extracts
of these substances.
It's easy to spot a supplement because
DSHEA requires manufacturers to include
the words "dietary supplement" on product
labels. Also, starting in March 1999, a "Supplement
Facts" panel has been required on the labels
of most dietary supplements.
FDA oversees safety, manufacturing and
product information, such as claims, in
a product's labeling, package inserts,
and accompanying literature. The Federal
Trade Commission regulates the advertising
of dietary supplements.
One thing dietary supplements are not
is drugs. A drug, which sometimes can be
derived from plants used as traditional
medicines, is an article that, among other
things, is intended to diagnose, cure,
mitigate, treat, or prevent diseases. Before
marketing, drugs must undergo clinical
studies to determine their effectiveness,
safety, possible interactions with other
substances, and appropriate dosages, and
FDA must review these data and authorize
the drugs' use before they are marketed.
FDA does not authorize or test dietary
supplements.
A product sold as a dietary supplement
and touted in its labeling as a new treatment
or cure for a specific disease or condition
would be considered an unauthorized--and
thus illegal--drug. Labeling changes consistent
with the provisions in DSHEA would be required
to maintain the product's status as a dietary
supplement.
Another thing dietary supplements are
not are replacements for conventional diets,
nutritionists say. Supplements do not provide
all the known--and perhaps unknown--nutritional
benefits of conventional food.
At DrugNatural™, we carry the most
reliable and trustworthy brand names. Please
feel comfortable in your purchase from
us.
Darshana Vaishnav, M. D. |