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THE IRISH MEDICINES Board has advised against children under 12 using echinacea.
Children’s herbal product containing echinacea will no longer be recommended for use among the under-12s due to the lack of scientific data to support their use, the IMB said.
The advice comes after the IMB’s review of the available date on the safety and effectiveness of echinacea as well as guidance from the European Medicines Agency’s Committee on Herbal Medicinal Products.
The IMB concluded that echinacea can be associated with rare side effects – mainly allergic reactions, which can be severe in some cases.
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The organisation says it is contacting retailers “and others within the supply chain” to inform them of its advice and to recommend the withdrawal from sale of children’s products containing echinacea.
Adult echinacea products are not affected by the IMB advice. However, while some adult products contain information on children’s dosages, children should also not use these products. The IMB expects adult product information to change in the coming months to reflect its advice on the use of echinacea among the under-12s.
IMB director of human products authorisation Ann O’Connor said that this is not a serious safety issue and that the advice being issued is “precautionary in nature”:
This is a prudent measure which is being taken following evaluation of data availab.e Our view is that there are potential risks associated with the use of echinacea-containing products in children under 12 years of age and there is limited evidence of benefit in this age group.
As a result, we are recommending that they should no longer be used. It is important to carefully check the ingredient list on a herbal product and if it contains echinacea, it should not be given to children.
“As with all medicines, the goal is to maximise the benefits of use and reduce the risks,” she added.
Retailers are being advised to remove stocks of children’s echinacea herbal medicines from sale and return them to the supplier. They are also being advised to inform people buying adult echinacea products of the IMB’s advice concerning their use among children.
Until last year, products of this nature were not fully subject to regulatory requirement. But upon the implementation of the European Health Medicines Directive in Ireland in 2011, the IMB has carried out a review of herbal products on the Irish market.
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Biden won’t do anything that will jeopardise the GFA and all world leaders know at this stage that BJ and the British government can not be trusted. The US and the EU can stand firm on this one. The UK are out of the big boys club of world trade and have a dirty report card. This is going to get very interesting.
@2thFairy: Boris is only interested in the people that vote for him which they are doing so in ever greater numbers he has already said he doesn’t like the expression “Special Relationship” but the relationship he does have with America is one that see’s a US destroyer sailing alongside HMS Queen Elizabeth which also has 200 US Marines on board as it sails to the South China Sea to main freedom of navigation, security & intelligence is the part of the relationship that matters “The Five Eyes” it matters to both nations. If you think the EU is going to put a spanner in that spoke you are much mistaken. UK isn’t seriously looking for a trade deal with the US on the terms being offered. The CPTPP is the next trade block the UK is looking at, not the EU & not the US ;-)
@Joe Thorpe: matters of military and world security are completely separate and will always be negotiated between the two countries as allies. Don’t cloud world trade with national and international security. The U.K. does need to trade with the EU and the US and anyone that thinks otherwise is fooling themselves.
From fresh produce to raw materials to global banking the U.K. need to be at the table.
@2thFairy: You seem to think UK electorate care if they trade with a trade agreement with the EU which is in place at the moment or revert to WTO. No one cares they would be more than happy to revert to WTO trade with the EU it’s delusional to think the UK is in a weak position here. They have their own currency they are borrowing from themselves they have to repay themselves while over here we get a billion or so from the EU & have to repay 17 billion in solidarity with the waster Mediterranean nations who have spent money like Elton John & passing their debts onto us. I’d be more concerned about Biden coming for our supper by forcing tax changes these are what Ireland should be shouting about not obsessing about what the UK does. Soon enough the UK will start inspecting goods into the UK
@Joe Thorpe: what on earth are you talking about. The UK have just left the most successful trading bloc they have ever had and now they want to keep all the bells and whistles that have enjoyed the fruits of since it’s conception. They negotiated a deal and signed up to a deal that they rushed through because they didn’t want to wait. Now they are saying the deals not good enough for them. They are blaming the EU. It beggars belief that the US and the EU are STILL trying to help a nation that is consistently telling lies and refusing to abide by its own decisions. I’d have given up on them years ago.
Johnson harping on about Churchill and Roosevelt and saying they had to work togeth recover post WW2 is revisionist at best. Post WW2 FDR was quite dead, and Churchill was gone in 45. They may have helped win the war, but post war recovery was Truman and Eden
@Kevin Norris: Marshall plan was passed in 1948, 3 years after the war was over. FDR and Churchill were fixated on winning the war, and keeping Stalin in check should they win. Victory was not a done deal. All assets were pretty much for the war effort and keeping people fed. Thinking of rebuilding the economy was a we’ll deal with that when we win scenario.
@Xanadu Marmalade: what are you talking about? Post WW2 the leaders were different but 5 years on from brexit Biden is president and Johnson is PM the fact you don’t get what he’s saying perfectly illustrates why you are apparently annoyed with the comments in the first place. And why are you annoyed? Is it not a good thing to have the president of the US on our side? Or are you disappointed its not the buffoon from before getting everything wrong?
@Cuhullan ⭐⭐: A lot of assumptions made there. Delighted Joe is in our corner. From a long line of dyed in the wool Democrats. Folks even voted for Mondale when a lot of Irish Americans opted for Ronald Reagan.
@Kevin Norris: There was loads of planning, but despite making a short comeback in the 50′s Churchill was totally opposed to change and the ceding of their colonies. He had become more tory than the torries themselves. Post war Britain was a Labour project.
Today – Johnson obviously was to protect the GFA, but knows its not compatible with Brexit, or at least with the DUP unionist version of it.
Boris supplied the Brexit oil and the DUP is still trying to mix the Unionist water!
The problem is that nobody new what the outcome for voting in Brexit was going to be ,nor did anyone take the time to read into the small print? If they did, they would not have voted in. There bed is made now! It’s time to liy in it.
@Heisen berg1: actually they did know. Remainers were shouting it from the rooftops. Leavers called it scaremongering. Now they claim no one told them.
@2thFairy: your spot on there. My sister who lives in the UK almost 30 years + was one who voted to remain in the EU. Her friend who is British voted out saying “We’re British!” This is Great Britain, we WILL be GREAT again!! Now her friend says that the EU and not playing fair, that their making things awkwark for them. When my sister tells her its because you voted out of the EU, and its your own fault for doing so, she gets all uptight about it. They want their bread buttered on both sides do the UK. Not going to happen I think!!
@Heisen berg1: That’s completely wrong. The UK voting public are doubling down with their voting the Conservatives took a rock solid Labour seat that was being fought by a remainer MP who lost his seat standing on a remain platform in the previous election & then to emphasise the way the UK electorate is going they also cleaned up in the local elections. The next big test will be the next by-election which is a massive rock solid Labour seat & if the conservatives get close in that one (I doubt they will actually win it) then you are going to see Labour start to implode.
@Liam Byrne: Obviously him and you do not because putting a border between GB and NI breaks the GFA, Even the Irish constitution recognises that NI is part of the UK.
@On the right side: That’s right, any border breaks the GFA in principle, but it was up to the British to come up with a solution given their red lines, which were not just to leave the EU, but also the single market, and most importantly, the customs union – which implies there will have to be a border *somewhere*.
They didn’t need to leave the CU in order to ‘get Brexit done’ but they did it anyway, and that’s why there’s a customs border down the Irish Sea, one which Johnson himself signed up to
@On the right side: On the wrong side again. The Irish constitution was changed (articles 2 & 3 dropped) to accommodate an agreement that you unionist guys failed to sign up to. Now when it suits you guys, you have the neck to refer to the same constitution.
You are not on the right side – more like the comical side!
Your Horsemeat sausage came from within the EU The EUs main interest is to punish the brits for leaving the club…They care nothing about the GFA or BA …
@John Rownano: since day 1 of the Brexit negotiations the EU has made it clear that the GFA and the integrity of the EU market are the red lines. It was repeatedly pointed out to the UK negotiators that this would pose a logistical problem. Ironically, the horsemeat scandal is a perfect example of why the EU is so keen on food regulations and it came from the UK no less.
@Accidental Gentleman: Are you desperately trying to rewrite history?
The French government believes that the sale of horsemeat labelled as beef went on for six months and involved about 750 tonnes of meat.
Spanghero imported meat from Romania and sold it on to another company, Comigel, which made frozen ready meals at its factory in Luxembourg.
French Consumer Affairs Minister Benoit Hamon said the meat had left Romania clearly and correctly labelled as horse. It was afterwards that it was relabelled as beef.
“From the investigation, it would seem that the first agent or actor in this network who stamped ‘beef’ on horsemeat from Romania was Spanghero,” Mr Hamon said. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-21464052
@Setanta Stylfox: It was horsemeat imported from Poland by one certain “Fear maith” and incorporated into Silvercrest “beef burgers” –And incidentally the same fear maith used the ensuing stink as an excuse to reduce the price that he was paying his own suppliers.
@Setanta Stylfox: The French government believes that the sale of horsemeat labelled as beef went on for six months and involved about 750 tonnes of meat.
Spanghero imported meat from Romania and sold it on to another company, Comigel, which made frozen ready meals at its factory in Luxembourg.
French Consumer Affairs Minister Benoit Hamon said the meat had left Romania clearly and correctly labelled as horse. It was afterwards that it was relabelled as beef.
“From the investigation, it would seem that the first agent or actor in this network who stamped ‘beef’ on horsemeat from Romania was Spanghero,” Mr Hamon said.
There was “no reason to doubt the good faith” of the Romanian abattoir that originally provided the meat, Mr Hamon added.
The investigation says some blame may rest with Comigel, which made the ready meals sold around Europe.
The latest country to be hit by the crisis is Germany, where some supermarket chains have removed frozen lasagne from sale after traces of horsemeat were detected.
The widening scandal has raised questions about the complexity of the food industry’s supply chains across Europe.
@FlopFlipU: It was found by the British not the Europeans. If the EU was serious it has options like stopping exports of Energy or Food to the UK from the EU it could also introduce tariffs but as the UK imports a lot more so they could more than retaliate. The EU could also keep the UK out of Horizon projects but they would then have to find a replacement for the money the UK puts in the pot & then their is security & defense but the UK has already said it’s not interested in a security & defense partnership so it would be a bit pointless suspending cooperation in that area especially as the EU has no influence over NATO
@Setanta Stylfox: The meat product came from Eastern EU countries. I’d imagine those suppliers will be kept out of the UK market in the future & replaced with meat products from New Zealand, Australia & Canada
I’m missing something here… the maps show NI as part of the UK so why should a border be imposed on them , I’m pretty sure if the eu decided to place a border between 2 counties in the Republic we would be up in arms…
@HoneyGold: Try reading the Irish constitution that recognises that Northern Ireland is part of the United Kngdom.
Speaking to the Northern Ireland Forum on 17 April 1998 Ulster Unionist Party politician David Trimble said:
The illegal territorial claim to Northern Ireland in Articles 2 and 3 of the Irish Constitution has been removed and the South now accepts the legitimacy of Northern Ireland.
@On the right side: The Irish constitution that was only amended to comply with the Good Friday Agreement which also stated there would be no hard border. If someone wants to break that agreement the constitution can be changed right back
@On the right side: OK then, where would you place the EU/UK border? Theresa May drew the infamous impossible red lines.
Refused to be in Single Market or Customs Union so there has to be a border between the UK and EU other than the English Channel.
She refused the (illegal) border between ROI/NI
Refused a border in the Irish sea
Boris “got it done” by drawing a line down the Irish sea. He scrubbed out one of Theresa May’s red lines – the only possible solution.
This is all the work of the DUP and Tories. Why are you blaming EU and ROI? Classic case of Dr. Frankenstein trying to blame the monster.
@whitewater: errrrr…. Probably became America is his his best friend. All US Presidents are most definitely Ireland’s friends. The Irish/American vote is too powerful for them to ignore. There would not be peace in NI without the Americans.
But sadly I can see Joe’s finger wagging and defence of Ireland will be taken as an offence by the Brits. Who will even more aggressively stir the near boiling pot.
It’s in their nature.
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