Seal of the American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine, and
Seal of the the American Board of Anti-Aging Medicine
CRITICS TAKE OUTRAGEOUS POSITION AGAINST ANTI-AGING MEDICAL
PROFESSIONALS DEMANDING CRIMINAL SANCTIONS AGAINST PHYSICIANS
PRACTICING GROWTH HORMONE REPLACEMENT THERAPY
Urgent Information re: JAMA Oct 26, 2005 article: 'Provision or
Distribution of Growth Hormone for "Anti-Aging": Clinical and Legal
Issues'.
This week, JAMA published an article on the legality of growth hormone
treatment by physicians for growth hormone deficient patients. This
paper is replete with inaccurate and biased statements and basic
scientific errors in an apparent attempt to damage the Anti-Aging
medical profession and the physicians practicing good evidenced based
healthcare. The authors picked biased studies to bolster their
disinformation campaign, and even went so far as to intermingle
internet sales of homeopathic pseudo GH sprays, amino acids, and
sports nutritionals, in order to inflate their misleading claims for
an illegal diversion of GH by physicians and pharmacies, implying a
black market in GH for hormone replacement treatments by anti-aging
physicians where none exists.
We have assembled international scientific and legal teams to prepare
a response to JAMA as a letter to the editor, as well as press release
responses to this poor attempt at damaging the profession. No efforts
will be spared in defending the rights of our member physicians. It is
shocking that this paper ever passed peer review in such a prestigious
publication as JAMA. This article will now be used as a weapon by
those with an agenda to damage the rights of physicians to provide
high level care to their patients. We are also assembling a legal team
with the assistance of the insurance industry to protect physicians
against untoward prosecution by state medical boards and other
agencies and protect your right to practice advanced preventative
medicine for the benefit of your patients.
Recent media reports about the federal law concerning human growth
hormone (hGH) have created unnecessary sensationalism and confusion.
Any analysis of 21 U.S.C. 333(e), the federal statute that
criminalizes the unlawful distribution of human growth hormone must
include discussion of its historical context and legislative intent.
The statute, passed as part of the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988,
originally applied to anabolic steroids, not hGH. It was enacted at a
time when concerns over steroids in sports had reached national
consciousness (coincidentally, enacted the same year that Canadian
sprinter Ben Johnson tested positive for steroids), and was intended
to combat steroid trafficking to cheating athletes by coaches,
trainers and non physicians. When, in 1990, Congress took a more
aggressive approach to anabolic steroids by passing a new law (the
Anabolic Steroid Control Act of 1990) to elevate them to the status of
controlled substances, concerns over the use of hGH in sports resulted
in hGH being inserted to replace anabolic steroids in 21 U.S.C. 333(e).
The focus of Congress in this area has always been to address
non-medical use specifically, the sports-related use of hormonal
substances, particularly by elite athletes and teenagers. One of the
authors of this recent JAMA article, stated to United Press
International (UPI) in reference to the statute, "They basically put
in language that made it crystal clear that it is illegal to use
growth hormone as an anti-aging intervention".
This is a very odd statement, considering the fact that when the law
was written there were no anti-aging doctors or profession in
existence. In fact the profession did not even birth until 5 years
after it was first put in place in 1988. Such bias and clear agenda to
harm a large population of dedicated physicians should have no place
in a publication like JAMA.
As we understand applicable law, physicians may prescribe hGH to treat
diseases. At no time has Congress evinced any intent to restrict
ethical physicians from prescribing hGH to mature or elderly adults
for medical reasons within their sound judgment. Nothing in the
statute dictates to physicians how to diagnose the indications for
diseases which may be treated by hGH. Any inference that the statute
was intended to prohibit physicians from prescribing hGH for hormone
replacement purposes in GH-deficient adults is misplaced. Replacement
of GH in GH-deficient adults is a medical use of hGH authorized by the
FDA. Any implication that the statute was intended to target medical
hormone replacement by ethical doctors in the new and emerging field
of anti-aging medicine is incorrect and misleading. Medical science
writers should refrain from making biased or inflammatory statements.
Agenda-driven science is no science at all.
The Academy requests you immediately start to document any losses,
adverse patient communications, or disruption of your medical
practice, or practice income as a result of adverse publicity from the
JAMA article or associated press. We intend to take further action in
defense of our members practice rights.
A4M will stand with its members for the protection of health care
freedoms for physicians and patients seeking the benefit of legitimate
therapies for a longer and healthier life. You should share this
important information with colleagues and feel free to express your
views to JAMA as well as the appropriate agencies.
We expect to be releasing our formal responses to all parties mid next
week beginning of November. We will setting up a website of all
aspects of this issue. Please feel free to express your views to:
GHD@worldhealth.net. Media please contact media@worldhealth.net.
For more information please visit our website www.worldhealth.net.
This message is brought to you as a valued subscriber of the American
Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine, or as a visitor or attendee to one of
the Academy's Web sites or Conferences. You are subscribed to this
newsletter with the email address mcastellanos@cinci.rr.com.
To stop receiving this email from the American Academy of Anti-Aging
Medicine, kindly click here: http://www.worldhealth.net/p/121.html to
UNSUBSCRIBE.
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Diet fitness health nutrition wellness Health promotion and wellness Business health wellness
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Seal of the the American Board of Anti-Aging Medicine
CRITICS TAKE OUTRAGEOUS POSITION AGAINST ANTI-AGING MEDICAL
PROFESSIONALS DEMANDING CRIMINAL SANCTIONS AGAINST PHYSICIANS
PRACTICING GROWTH HORMONE REPLACEMENT THERAPY
Urgent Information re: JAMA Oct 26, 2005 article: 'Provision or
Distribution of Growth Hormone for "Anti-Aging": Clinical and Legal
Issues'.
This week, JAMA published an article on the legality of growth hormone
treatment by physicians for growth hormone deficient patients. This
paper is replete with inaccurate and biased statements and basic
scientific errors in an apparent attempt to damage the Anti-Aging
medical profession and the physicians practicing good evidenced based
healthcare. The authors picked biased studies to bolster their
disinformation campaign, and even went so far as to intermingle
internet sales of homeopathic pseudo GH sprays, amino acids, and
sports nutritionals, in order to inflate their misleading claims for
an illegal diversion of GH by physicians and pharmacies, implying a
black market in GH for hormone replacement treatments by anti-aging
physicians where none exists.
We have assembled international scientific and legal teams to prepare
a response to JAMA as a letter to the editor, as well as press release
responses to this poor attempt at damaging the profession. No efforts
will be spared in defending the rights of our member physicians. It is
shocking that this paper ever passed peer review in such a prestigious
publication as JAMA. This article will now be used as a weapon by
those with an agenda to damage the rights of physicians to provide
high level care to their patients. We are also assembling a legal team
with the assistance of the insurance industry to protect physicians
against untoward prosecution by state medical boards and other
agencies and protect your right to practice advanced preventative
medicine for the benefit of your patients.
Recent media reports about the federal law concerning human growth
hormone (hGH) have created unnecessary sensationalism and confusion.
Any analysis of 21 U.S.C. 333(e), the federal statute that
criminalizes the unlawful distribution of human growth hormone must
include discussion of its historical context and legislative intent.
The statute, passed as part of the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988,
originally applied to anabolic steroids, not hGH. It was enacted at a
time when concerns over steroids in sports had reached national
consciousness (coincidentally, enacted the same year that Canadian
sprinter Ben Johnson tested positive for steroids), and was intended
to combat steroid trafficking to cheating athletes by coaches,
trainers and non physicians. When, in 1990, Congress took a more
aggressive approach to anabolic steroids by passing a new law (the
Anabolic Steroid Control Act of 1990) to elevate them to the status of
controlled substances, concerns over the use of hGH in sports resulted
in hGH being inserted to replace anabolic steroids in 21 U.S.C. 333(e).
The focus of Congress in this area has always been to address
non-medical use specifically, the sports-related use of hormonal
substances, particularly by elite athletes and teenagers. One of the
authors of this recent JAMA article, stated to United Press
International (UPI) in reference to the statute, "They basically put
in language that made it crystal clear that it is illegal to use
growth hormone as an anti-aging intervention".
This is a very odd statement, considering the fact that when the law
was written there were no anti-aging doctors or profession in
existence. In fact the profession did not even birth until 5 years
after it was first put in place in 1988. Such bias and clear agenda to
harm a large population of dedicated physicians should have no place
in a publication like JAMA.
As we understand applicable law, physicians may prescribe hGH to treat
diseases. At no time has Congress evinced any intent to restrict
ethical physicians from prescribing hGH to mature or elderly adults
for medical reasons within their sound judgment. Nothing in the
statute dictates to physicians how to diagnose the indications for
diseases which may be treated by hGH. Any inference that the statute
was intended to prohibit physicians from prescribing hGH for hormone
replacement purposes in GH-deficient adults is misplaced. Replacement
of GH in GH-deficient adults is a medical use of hGH authorized by the
FDA. Any implication that the statute was intended to target medical
hormone replacement by ethical doctors in the new and emerging field
of anti-aging medicine is incorrect and misleading. Medical science
writers should refrain from making biased or inflammatory statements.
Agenda-driven science is no science at all.
The Academy requests you immediately start to document any losses,
adverse patient communications, or disruption of your medical
practice, or practice income as a result of adverse publicity from the
JAMA article or associated press. We intend to take further action in
defense of our members practice rights.
A4M will stand with its members for the protection of health care
freedoms for physicians and patients seeking the benefit of legitimate
therapies for a longer and healthier life. You should share this
important information with colleagues and feel free to express your
views to JAMA as well as the appropriate agencies.
We expect to be releasing our formal responses to all parties mid next
week beginning of November. We will setting up a website of all
aspects of this issue. Please feel free to express your views to:
GHD@worldhealth.net. Media please contact media@worldhealth.net.
For more information please visit our website www.worldhealth.net.
This message is brought to you as a valued subscriber of the American
Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine, or as a visitor or attendee to one of
the Academy's Web sites or Conferences. You are subscribed to this
newsletter with the email address mcastellanos@cinci.rr.com.
To stop receiving this email from the American Academy of Anti-Aging
Medicine, kindly click here: http://www.worldhealth.net/p/121.html to
UNSUBSCRIBE.
SPONSORED LINKS Health and wellness Health wellness product Health and wellness program
Diet fitness health nutrition wellness Health promotion and wellness Business health wellness
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS
Visit your group "hypogonadism2" on the web.
To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
hypogonadism2-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com
Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service.