Doctors suggest Avandia label addition: become a vegan!
Avandia, just one of the pharmaceutical drugs linked to horrible side effects in recent years, now may have yet another defensive posture to put up -- against the physician industry.A group of doctors has asked the Food and Drug Administration to include more warning verbiage on Avandia's label, but it's not your normal "may be dangerous" type of warning. Avandia is marketed as a diabetes drug.
The group would like to include a statement that a vegan diet will produce a more "effective approach" to lowering blood sugar than taking Avandia itself. Wow. That's pretty powerful coming from a physician's group, and I am all for it. Nutrition changes could help so many people with diseases, but "the pill" is just too convenient for the lazy butts of many of us.
If you've taken Avandia, what do you think about this proposal? It's food for thought, big time.
The year 2007 is coming to a close and it's time for the year-end wrap ups. There were a lot of important health stories in 2007 -- MRSA, food recalls, toy recalls, etc -- and now seems like the perfect time to find out which ones made the biggest impact. CNN recently listed their
GlaxoSmithKline's Avandia diabetes drug has had so many bad marks against it recently that it's amazing anyone is still buying it. Well, here's another.
Avandia, the prescription drug used to control diabetes in many U.S. patients, will have a new warning label affixed soon.
After months and months of scares and media coverage on the possible heart risks of taking the diabetes drug Avandia, a "black box" warning will soon come to that drug's packaging.
There seems to be quite a bit of news about the negative side effects of many prescription drugs these days, but do these drugs help more people than they hurt?
Avandia has
If you are an Avandia patient who is taking the drug for the treatment of diabetes, there's no urgent need to quit taking the drug, even with recent 











