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CENTRAL JERSEY CELIAC/DH SUPPORT GROUP
and Cel-Kids Network CSA # 58
Wednesday, March 29th
East Brunswick Public Library
7:30 PM
For info Call: Diane at 732/679-6566
Topic:
The recent Digestive Disease Public Policy Forum this past March 12th and
13th which took place in Washington, DC.
One of the inclosures in the packet that many attendees presented to their
senator and congressmen.
Of special interest:
GENERIC DRUGS
Potential Health Risk To Individuals With Digestive Diseases
As health care costs are reviewed, the use of generic drugs appears in more
corporate contractual arrangements. Product ingredients used as common drug
fillers pose health threat to those with digestive diseases.
In general, information about generic drugs is, at best,questionable.For
example,little,if any information about excipients is available to either
patients or pharmacists. The formula can and does change without notice. This
presents a very significant, and real and implied risk to digestive disease
patients.
Those with celiac disease experience damage to the small intestine if
they consume wheat, barley, rye and possibly oats (WBRO) in any manner, form or
quantity including not just the grains themselves but also ant derivatives or
variants.
At the present time, the only known "cure" for celiac disease is the
total and permanent elimination of WBRO from the diet of a celiac patient, that
is, the medically required gluten-free lifestyle.
Because WBRO can occur in many places (inert ingredients in any
product, flour dusting of product transfer lines, packaging ingredients, air
contamination during manufacture, products made on the same manufacturing line,etc.)
crosscontamination and hidden sources of toxic materials (WBRO) are a major
concern for celiacs as well as other digestive disease patients.
Digestive disease patients require information to control their own
lifestyle. For a digestive disease patient who requires medicines on a daily
long-term basis, information about all ingredients in each medicine is of vital
concern in order to avoid any harmful ingredients,includingWBRO in the case of
a celiac patient.
Obtaining the necessary information about generic drugs is a difficult
situation and becoming more challenging for older individules,particularly
those with multiple drug needs and multiple digestive sensitivities.
The Digestive Disease National Coalition DDNC strongly urges that all
medicines be made available in package inserts and other patient/pharmacist
informational resources. As many as two million diagnosed and undiagnosed celiacs in
the United States need information at the point of purchase to realistically
live their medically required lifestyle "cure"
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