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Education MEC Lesufi apologises for promoting ‘miracle’ herbal cure for COVID

Gauteng Education MEC Panyaza Lesufi has apologised after a video on local social media showed him promoting as “miracle” cure for COVID-19 a traditional Chinese herbal remedy, banned in several countries, reports Daily Maverick.

According to Daily Maverick, Lesufi has since retracted and “apologises for unfortunate leaked medical pronouncements”, saying the information “was shared to the public without my permission”.

Lesufi's apology said he “trusted the pharmacist, the custodian of medicines, to guide me correctly but that was not the case. I trusted my pharmacist in this instance who invited me to participate in taking part in the product study and who claimed that the product was submitted for approval”.

The promotional video for the traditional Chinese medicine product Lianhua Qingwen Capsules shows Lesufi alongside an insert picturing the capsules. Daily Maverick reports that he then introduces himself and explains that when his family was infected with COVID-19, a friend brought back some of the pills from China.

“I call [the pills] miracle capsules,” Lesufi says in the video, saying the capsules relieved their fever and made their headaches vanish. “They may not taste nice, but they do the work.” He then adds: “That is why one is committed to recommend them, highly so, to people that have COVID, or have gone through COVID, or have COVID symptoms. The solution that makes China to be free: itʼs now in our country.”

Lesufi is then asked by an off-camera female interviewer how long it took for symptoms to dissipate, and he replies that some of them “vanished immediately”.

South Africa has an unfortunate history of senior government officials touting bogus remedies for serious diseases, writes Daily Maverick, most notably, the late health minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimangʼs recommendation that HIV be treated with African potato, garlic and beetroot.

Before he had issued his apology, Daily Maverick had approached Lesufiʼs office to ask why he was promoting a herbal medicine product that has been the subject of controversy worldwide.

Apart from his claims that the video was “shared to the public without my knowledge”, his apology added that after “interactions with the South African Health Products Regulatory Authority (SAHPRA), I now realise that I participated in an unauthorised medical process and for that I sincerely apologise and hereby, unconditionally so, withdraw all the comments made during the product study”.

His spokesman, Steve Mabona, said: “MEC Lesufi, in his personal capacity, recently took part in medical trials for capsules to assist in the fight against various diseases. Following the trials, the MEC was asked about the impact of the medication on his health and, sadly, his response was leaked through social media; breaching his right to privacy and confidentiality.

“We find the leak unfortunate as the MEC participated in the trials to assist locals to seek medical permission from medical institutions in our country.”

Lesufi's added: “I also fully apologise that I did not verify with SAHPRA … if that was correct and acceptable. I sincerely apologise for my careless behaviour and will co-operate fully with SAHPRA to ensure that this matter is correctly addressed. I have already started engaging with the Regulatory Compliance unit of SAHPRA to ensure that we reverse the incorrect information shared with the public. I have since asked the pharmacist, who knows the approval processes, to also co-operate with SAHPRA and avail all relevant information to the regulatory body.

“I once more regret my participation in this incomplete process and the possible falsehood shared with members of the public.”

Heartlines CEO Dr Garth Japhet, who first drew the attention of Daily Maverick to the video, said that he had found Lesufiʼs endorsement of the Lianhua Qingwen Capsules outrageous.

“Treatments peddled by people who are not medically qualified, with no scientific proof that they work, are potentially life-threatening. Furthermore, it undermines the tough communications task we have to provide accurate information around this disease while responding to the deluge of fake news. This type of product endorsement is especially serious when the person that is promoting the treatment is a senior government official who holds a position of trust in society,” he said. He added that no senior government officials should be promoting a commercially available product of any kind, even in their private capacity, “as it is his position that confers legitimacy and not his private persona”.

Japhet said it was his concern that someone who has recently contracted COVID-19 and was fearful, might have seen Lesufiʼs video and believed he should follow the advice of a seemingly credible leader by taking the capsules instead of seeking proven treatments.

Health regulators in other countries have had to take action after Lianhua Qingwen Capsules started to flood the market in 2020, along with untested claims that they could successfully treat COVID-19, adds Daily Maverick. In the US, the Food & Drug Administration has issued warning letters to three companies for selling Lianhua Qingwen Capsules, which they refer to as “fraudulent COVID-19 products”. In Malaysia, a politician was slammed for misleading the public on social media by referring to the capsules as a “COVID-19 treatment pill”.

There is very little evidence to suggest the efficacy of these drugs, with a Swedish study finding that Lianhua Qingwen samples contained only menthol. Chinaʼs own health regulator, meanwhile, reportedly found toxins in some traditional Chinese medicine samples in 2020.

The BBC reported in June 2020 that the pandemic had provided an opportunity to market traditional Chinese medicine to a global market, with products being sent in particular to Africa, Central Asia and Europe. Some experts have suggested it is part of a “soft power” push on the part of Beijing.

Chinese President Xi Jinping is said to be a passionate supporter of the traditional Chinese medicine industry, to the point that in June 2020 it was reported that Beijing authorities were drafting legislation that would outlaw criticism of traditional medicine.

Japhet said, “For purposes of accountability, Lesufi needs to face a disciplinary inquiry for using his position and authority in a way that may place the lives of others at risk.”

 

Full Daily Maverick story – DailyGauteng Education MEC Panyaza Lesufi slammed for peddling fake Covid-19 cure online (Open access)

 

See also from Medbrief archives:

 

International crackdown on online fake medicines

 

Substance in Chinese medicinal plant may cause cardiac arrythmia

 

Fake medical journals, filled with bad science, are spreading

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