• Herbal Explorations: Practitioner vs. Product Claims | Asa Waldstein of Regulatory Compliance and Supplement Advisory Group

  • May 16 2022
  • Length: 24 mins
  • Podcast
Herbal Explorations: Practitioner vs. Product Claims | Asa Waldstein of Regulatory Compliance and Supplement Advisory Group  By  cover art

Herbal Explorations: Practitioner vs. Product Claims | Asa Waldstein of Regulatory Compliance and Supplement Advisory Group

  • Summary

  • In this episode, Wilson and Asa Waldstein, the principal of the Regulatory Compliance and Supplement Advisory Group and the creator of  the #WarningLetterWednesday. Asa and Wilson discuss how herbalists, TCM practitioners, naturopaths, and functional medicine doctors should make claims.


    Making Claims

    Claims you make as a practitioner are different from claims you make products, as product claims move out the practice scope and more into the realm of marketing (and regulation comes in).  It's really important to remember which hat you're wearing when you're doing what. Just because a practitioner or doctor may be able to make a statement  in one environment and one setting, doesn't mean they can make it in another setting.


    2022 and 2022 Warning on Testimonials and Paid Influencer Claims

    The FDA and FTC, they look at really the 30,000 foot view of a company's online persona, and the FDA investigator with probably no knowledge of TCM,  Recently, the  FDA, FTC and National Advertising Division, sent out 700 letters to 700 individual companies to put them on notice for their product review testimonials.


    When using any testimonials, they must be truthful, not misleading. Whoever is giving the testimonial, has to have tried the product before. And testimonials get even dicier when it comes to online statements made about herbal products, especially from social media influencers.


    The First Amendment

    The First Amendment gives a person the right to say a lot of things. But there's a difference between you as a public citizen and you as a practitioner/commercial marketer and commercial speech. They're regulated quite differently. As a practitioner, when you apply the first amendment to your customers and what they may say about your products or services, your customers are allowed to say whatever they want, that's uncompensated.


    Now if you as a practitioner then said, "Oh, that's so cool. I want to use that in my marketing." Then, if that practitioner reposted that or used that on their website, they're substantiating that claim. You’re inadvertently bridging that gap between potentially protected speech and that commercial connection. Oftentimes, you may not know any better.


    As a practitioner, you're not responsible for what anyone else says. But the second that you start playing with it or interacting with it, then the government says, "Well, now you're sort of adopting it." This applies to simply sharing it on social media. You can comment on it, on their page, and it could still, if the totality and the sum parts indicate that's what you're trying to do, then you might get in trouble as well.


    Listen to the complete episode to learn more about product claims, identifying high risk buzzwords,how to use lower risk words and statements, how to use the FDA Small Entity Compliance Guide to your advantage, and how to use your discretion in one-on-one consultations and selling compounded formulas.


    Learn more about Nuherbs: https://nuherbs.com

    Subscribe to the Herbal Explorations Podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/62PaOPlfMbWRmatQJNcHi2?si=7c38397101294d6a

    Subscribe Warning Letter Wednesday, a newsletter about FDA and Gov’t Regulation Enforcement Trends: https://www.asawaldstein.com/warning-letter-wednesday


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