Sunday, May 9, 2010

Alata Samina: Soap or Drug?

By Jean Lukaz MIH

Reviews of certain local products by the Consumer Partnership (The COP) on the Ghanaian markets reveal a certain level of uncertainty regarding their classifications. This is particularly the case of plant-based products that are sometimes erroneously referred to as herbal products but actually have no herbal basis for that description after they lose their herbal properties after being processed. It is even more complicated when the labelling of such products contain claims as to their potency in treating certain medical conditions.

Alata samina has been the worst offender so far with many that have been exported to the US rejected and returned on the basis that Alata Samina is a drug and not soap based on the claims on the labels, and therefore the need to certify them in Ghana as drugs.

Even some of the ‘improved’ versions of Alata Samina have the pharmaceutical plus sign on the labels and many are questionning to what extent some of these claims can be considered deceptive, given the local acceptance of Alata Samina as having medicinal properties.

Expert opinion from the Ghana Standards Board (GSB) indicate that Alata Samina can neither be referred to as ‘Herbal Soap’ as the initial herbal ingredients lose their herbal properties after the processing and the final product is just ordinary local soap that can neither be considered medicinal by technical standards, otherwise it has to be proven so and certified as a drug by the Food and Drugs Board (FDB) too.

www.ghanaconsumerwatch.blogspot.com
www.ghanaconsumerwatch.wordpress.com
www.theconsumerpartnership.wordpress.com

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