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As
we discussed in the Overview of
Hoodia, the Bushmen (or the San)
have used Hoodia plants as a
natural appetite suppressant for
thousands of years. But how did
the secret of the San get out?
It turns out by accident.
In 1996 the Council for
Scientific and Industrial
Research (CSIR) in South Africa
was doing a study of indigenous
foods that the Bushmen ate. Part
of the study was to test for
toxic effects of any plants that
were consumed by the Bushmen.
When they came to Hoodia
Gordonii, not only was it
non-toxic - it helped animals
lose weight!
They found when they fed hoodia
to animals, the animals lost
weight. By 1997, the CSIR
isolated the bioactive compound
in Hoodia responsible for
appetite suppression and
obtained a patent. The patent
was licensed to Phytopharm and
they named the molecule - P57
(because it was the 57th product
they spent money on).
What did the Bushmen get for
their discovery of the Hoodia
Gordonii plant?
At first - nothing! Turns out
the CSIR told Phytopharm that
the tribe which discovered the
Hoodia Gordonii plant had died
out and therefore no royalties
were due. However, as Mark Twain
might say - "tales of the
Bushmen's death were greatly
exaggerated". When the
Bushmen got word that Phytopharm
stood to make billions of
dollars off their knowledge
about the hoodia gordonii plant
they were not happy.
Roger Chennells, a lawyer in
South Africa who represents the
Bushmen, was quick to apply
strong legal , moral and
political pressure on both the
CSIR and Phytopharm. Chennells
pointed out to anyone who would
listen that the taking of
traditional knowledge without
compensation was
"bio-piracy" and must
be stopped.
In what is seen as a landmark
case, Chennells was able to
convince the CSIR and Phytopharm
to compensate the Bushmen. Now,
any company that legally
harvests hoodia gordonii from
the Kalahari desert must pay
royalties back to the Bushmen.
Not only is this fair and just,
it also provides an excellent
way to check if the hoodia you
buy is legitimate. If the
company that makes the hoodia is
NOT paying royalties to the
Bushmen, you do NOT have a
legitimate hoodia gordonii
product.
So when will Phytopharm release
a P57 based appetite
suppressant?
Probably never. As we touched on
in the overview, Pfizer had
originally paid Phytopharm for
the rights to market a P57 based
diet pill. After a few year of
unsuccessful attempts to make
P57 synthetically, Pfizer pulled
out of the deal. If a large
amount of P57 could not be
created inexpensively in the
lab, Pfizer was not interested.
While Phytopharm was discouraged
by the Pfizer decision, they
knew that Hoodia Gordonii was
too powerful an appetite
suppressant to give up trying to
bring it to the market. In
December 2004, Phytopharm
announced that Unilever had
entered a deal to market hoodia
gordonii in its diet food
product line. Therefore, rather
than producing diet drugs, it
looks like Phytopharm and
Unilever will product diet
supplements and diet foods with
hoodia. The first Unilever
products will not be out until
2008.
Does Phytopharm own the patent
on the whole Hoodia Gordonii
plant?
This is an interesting question
that we are sure will be decided
in court one day. Here is our
take on the situation -
Phytopharm clearly owns the
patent on the P57 molecule. If
you want to try to make a diet
drug with P57 you need to work
through Phytopharm.
The question of the Hoodia
Gordonii plant itself being
patented is much more
complicated. It is our belief
that you can not patent a plant,
but you can patent the use of
plants and a process to extract
plants. Here is an exact quote
from Richard Dixey, CEO of
Phytopharm when he appeared on
60 minutes.
"The patent is on the
application of the plant as a
weight-loss material. And, of
course, the active compounds
within the plant. It's not on
the plant itself," says
Dixey.
So no one else can use hoodia
for weight loss? "As a
weight-management product
without infringing the patent,
that's correct," says Dixey.
The way we read this (and again
we are not lawyers and are not
giving any legal advice) is as
follows - you can sell a Hoodia
Gordonii supplement, you just
can NOT say it is for weight
loss. This is why many of the
best Hoodia supplements have
very plain labels that just say
"Hoodia Gordonii" but
do not say anything about using
it as a weight loss or appetite
suppressant supplement.
We have tested the leading
Hoodia Brands and have selected
three products that we feel
offer the safest, most effective
weight loss on the market today:
Hoodia Gordonii Plus
Hoodia Balance
Hoodia Chaser
Hoodia Gordonii Plus is
a cutting-edge, advanced
appetite suppressant,
metabolism booster, fat
burner and energy
enhancer all in one.
This is a supplement if
you are looking for more
than just an appetite
suppressant.
Hoodia Balance contains
750MG of pure certified
Hoodia Gordonii from the
Kalahari Desert. This
product will not give
you the added benefit of
Energy but is a great
appetite suppressant.
Hoodia Chaser is quickly
absorbed into your body
and starts working
immediately to curb your
appetite. Just a few
drops of the Hoodia
Chaser liquid extract
will provide a more
potent and effective
dose of Hoodia.