It’s time to tighten control on dietary supplements

December 26, 2018 - 09:00

The growing production, import and trade of dietary supplements should be managed to avoid potential threats to users, experts said.

Police checked and discovered a large quantity of imported food supplements which were past their expiration dates at the premises of a company in Hà Nôi. - VNA/VNS Photo Trần Việt
Viet Nam News

HÀ NỘI — The growing production, import and trade of dietary supplements should be managed to avoid potential threats to users, experts said.

Food supplements are very popular in Viet Nam and can be found in drug stores, baby stores and online. Whether it’s imported or locally made, they are increasingly popular.

According to Nguyễn Thanh Phong, head of Vietnam Food Administration (VFA) under the Ministry of Health, more than 70 per cent of dietary supplements are produced by domestic firms and the rest are imported ones.

Chairman of the Vietnam Association of Functional Food (VAFF) Trần Đăng said the product had been one of the fastest growing sectors in the past decade.

While there were just 63 kinds of products provided by 13 importers in Việt Nam in 2000, 3,447 dietary supplements were available by the end of 2016 with 1,872 producers and importers.

The number of people taking dietary supplements also increased remarkably, according to VAFF.

In 2000, it was estimated that only 500,000 or 0.5 per cent of population using the product, most of them living in urban areas.

Nearly 20 million people or 21 per cent of the population were reported to take dietary supplements by 2017.

While producers tend to advertise the effectiveness of their products a bit too much, people are often convinced by the advertising. Many are over-using the supplements, leading to high number of people who have to go to the hospital for examinations and treatments.

Nguyễn Trung Nguyên, who is in charge of the Poison Control Centre under the Bạch Mai Hospital said there have been many cases of people hospitalised after using supplementary products for beauty, gain weight or weight loss.

He took the case of a female patient from Hà Nội as an example.

The 32-year-old patient named N.T.H was sent to the hospital in a state of nervous excitement. She was unable to sleep and had signs of mental disorder.

Nguyên attributed the above-mentioned problems to the fact that the patient had used weight loss products.

“Producers tend to put too much caffeine into weight loss products to keep the spirit of the users active while they are less active, making the heart beat faster and increase the blood pressure,” he said.

There were many weight loss products focusing on making the users lose their appetite, which would affect the health of consumers, Nguyên said.

Since more and more people purchase supplementary, the number of enterprises engaging in trading and producing the product is on the rise, too. Many enterprises and individuals adopt e-commerce through websites or Facebook as new ways to promote their products. Some take advantage of online purchases to sell substandard or fake products.

In the first six months of this year, the Market Watchdog nationwide discovered 52,147 violations with VNĐ8.9 billion (US$383,000) added to the State budget through fines.

Of which, 4,663 cases were related to the trade and manufacture of unsafe food.

Statistics from VFA showed that 88 units have been fined between January and November with the total capital of over VNĐ5.5 billion (US$236,000).

Deputy Minister of Health Nguyễn Quốc Cường said the emergence of a lot of supplementary products had helped diversified the market. However, its availability had also led to a number of violations relating to the manufacturing, trading and advertising of this kind of products. Businesses broke the rule in advertising products which didn’t register or advertise their supplementary diets with unlawful content, he said.

Nguyễn Văn Lợi from Drug Administration of Vietnam said consumers should be careful while buying health products online as no one can assure its origin.

Trần Việt Nga, deputy head of VFA, agreed, saying it was illegal to sell foreign products imported by individuals in small quantities  – what Vietnamese consumers call “hàng xách tay.”

Nga advised consumers to select supplementary products that have been registered with authorised agencies. — VNS

 

 

 

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