Okay, so when is a supplement a nonprescription medication?
If I ingest 5 of the nutty flavored seeds from an apple, have I ingested--depending on what you’re selling or how you look at it, say as a chemist--“vitamin c-17,” laetrile, or hydrogen cyanide...or did I merely ingested 5 apple seeds? (we know that If I ate a cup of Apple seeds in one sitting, I’d die. So there is some dose that impairs but doesn’t kill).
I hear on the Tim Ferriss podcast ads for various lionsmane mushroom teas for “clarity & focus.” (Ferriss usually also says in the ad, “with no visuals or unwanted effects that will interfere with work.’
Lately i’ve been hearing ads for various--even the spokesman admit--nasty looking & tasting “greens powder.” what about protein powders? Slim fast drinks? Various kombucha drinks touting “clear mind” or “digestion” or “immunity”?
Are turmeric capsules a nonprescription medicine for (maybe) lowering blood pressure or just a supplement that people in “blue zones” get a lot of in their diets for general health & long life?
You get my drift. It’s very confusing & often arbitrary. Is intent the arbiter of what constitutes an “over-the-counter medication”?