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Polish medical authority calls for stricter laws on dietary supplements

PR dla Zagranicy
Alicja Baczyńska 16.05.2018 08:30
Poland's Supreme Medical Council has called for more stringent laws on dietary supplements, a daily reported on Wednesday.
Photo: stevebp/pixabay.com/CC0 Creative CommonsPhoto: stevebp/pixabay.com/CC0 Creative Commons

In 2017, producers introduced 15,000 new dietary supplements onto the market, more than in the previous nine years combined, according to the Rzeczpospolita daily.

A study carried out by the Medical University of Łódź in central Poland has found that 50 percent of Poles consider dietary supplements to be safe to use even though no more than 0.5 percent of such products are medically tested by the Chief Sanitary Inspectorate, Rzeczpospolita said.

Polish law does not require dietary supplements to be tested before they are put up for sale, according to the newspaper.

The Polish dietary supplements market was worth PLN 4.02 billion (EUR 940 million, USD 1.12 bn) in 2017, with Poles purchasing 240 million such products annually, Rzeczpospolita reported.

Meanwhile, over 11 percent of people consuming dietary supplements experience unwanted side effects, according to the study by the Medical University of Łódź.

(aba/gs)

Source: Rzeczpospolita

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