Canadian Drugs for a Beautiful You at a Reasonable Price

Nov 28
08:08

2011

Remcel Mae P. Canete

Remcel Mae P. Canete

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Today’s modern era has high standards when it comes to health & beauty.

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Today’s modern era has high standards when it comes to health and beauty.  In lieu,Canadian Drugs for a Beautiful You at a Reasonable Price Articles various Canada drugs have been developed to uphold youthful glow specifically in each and every individual.

"The debate is often framed here between treatment and enhancement," said Dr. Joel Lexchin, a professor of health policy and management at York University in Toronto. "They're taking what is traditionally considered normal human variation and trying to homogenize the way people look. On an individual level, people can do probably whatever they want, but on a collective level, we have to think about whether producing drugs that enhance people is really the best use of our resources."

"The FDA does not have a special category for 'cosmetic' or 'lifestyle' prescription drugs," Walsh said. "Rather, each Canadian prescription drug is evaluated based on scientific data and clinical trials under the FDA's new drug application process."

"Under the U.S. Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, a medication must meet the statutory definition of a drug, which is determined in part," Walsh said, by its intended use. "Drugs are defined as articles intended for use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment or prevention of disease," she said, and "articles (other than food) intended to affect the structure or any function of the body of man or other animals."

A tried and tested acne gel for an example, patients don’t hesitate to buy Aczone since it has fully met the FDA standards.

"So often, the answers are not known about the true side effects. If something changes the color of the irises, what else might it be doing that's not so visible?" said Stacy Malkan, co-founder of Campaign for Safe Cosmetics, a nonprofit coalition to eliminate unsafe chemicals from cosmetics and other personal care products. "This just seems like a new frontier ... of incomplete research."

Leonore Tiefer, a clinical associate professor of psychiatry at NYU Langone Medical Center, said a "slippery, blurry border between the social and medical dimensions of health makes it nearly impossible to define what constitutes a medical condition anymore."

"It's just not so clear about what's a disorder, a dysfunction, a disability," said Tiefer, whose research on so-called "female sexual dysfunction" has challenged the medicalization of common sexual behaviors and functioning. "Throughout history, the boundaries have moved around. Medicine proceeds in ways that perhaps are not so obvious, and drug development does, too. How do you know something is a medical condition at all, unless it leads to immediate death? You add on these considerations that seem to nail it down, but it turns out they don't really nail it down."