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ABC
News - Hoodia Diet Pills
LONDON, Aug. 7 A wild plant used by generations of native
Bushmen in South Africa's Kalahari Desert to help them
avoid starvation in the dry, hot sands could make them
millionaires if it is successfully developed into a
weight-loss drug for Westerners.
"I learned how to eat it from my forefathers," said
one member of the San tribe, a people who live in the
Kalahari Desert, as he prepared a piece of the cactus-like
plant called hoodia by trimming off the prickly spikes.
"It is my food, my water, and also a medicine for me."
Hoodia
Gordonii Cactus Diet Drug According to San spokesman
Andries Steenkamp, his people ate the hoodia plant for
thousands of years in order to ward off hunger pains
and to quench their thirst during lean times and when
they were forced to survive during long hunting trips.
"Hoodia gordonii cactus stops hunger and also treats
sickness," Steenkamp told ABCNEWS. "We, San, use the
plant during hunting to fight off the pain of hunger
and thirst."
Pfizer
Developing Key Ingredient for diet drug hoodia Now drug
firms are tapping into the San knowledge, and are hoping
to make a fortune by developing the hoodia plant into
a miracle slimming pill for millions of overweight Americans
and Europeans.
One
of those firms is Pfizer, the U.S. pharmaceutical giant
responsible for Viagra. It has invested as much as $21
million for the rights to develop and license the active
ingredient of hoodia, called P-57. Obesity is a growing
problem in Western countries, where 100 million people
are dangerously overweight.
Doctors
say excessive weight gain causes a myriad of medical
problems including heart disease, diabetes, cancer and
the onset of strokes. P-57 works by mimicking the effect
that glucose has on nerve cells in the brain — in effect
fooling the body into thinking it is full, even when
it is not, thus curbing the appetite.
Clinical trials of the hoodia gordonii diet drug in
the United Kingdom suggest P-57 could reduce appetite
by up to 2,000 calories a day, making it a potential
runaway success in the multimillion-dollar dieting industry.
Developers of P-57 hope to see it available as a prescription
diet drug by 2007, after further clinical trials. The
irony that some of the world's most overfed people may
benefit from some of the hungriest was not lost on the
San. "At first people here were a bit shocked," said
Nigel Crawhall, a professor at the South African San
Institute and a campaigner for the rights of indigenous
tribes."Why
would anybody want to lose weight by eating the hoodia
cactus plant? Because it's meant for when you're traveling
across the desert and you don't have enough to eat.
So we thought it was a bit weird."
Promised
a Cut in Profits A tribe of hunter-gatherers whose 20,000-year-old
culture was recently close to extinction, the San people
could now have found the ultimate survival weapon in
their reliance on hoodia cactus. Pfizer has promised
them a cut of the royalties. But the chance to share
in the proceeds of a revolutionary new diet drug didn't
come without a fight.
Roger Chennells, a lawyer who in 1999 helped the San
win back a large portion of their ancestral homelands
in South Africa, decided to challenge the drug firms
and the South African research institute that originally
took out the hoodia patent in 1996. After a prolonged
battle an agreement was finally reached earlier this
year. "There was a certain amount of mistrust because
it was a significant amount of money and each side had
a lot to lose," said Chennells. "But after a fight,
both parties were satisfied." Now the San will help
to cultivate the plant and should the drug come to market,
their impoverished community of an estimated 100,000
people scattered across the Kalahari Desert stands to
gain millions of dollars annually, plus jobs and scholarships
from the hoodia cactus.
Dreams of Riches But first the drug must be proven to
work and then it must be declared safe to use by government
medical boards. Crawhall said the mood is one of anxious
anticipation. "There are lots of promises, and lots
of excitement, but people have seen promises before
and they don't always deliver, so there's also a bit
of caution," he said. "People can't help but wondering
if this is really going to happen or not." In the meantime,
the needy San people continue to hang on to life in
the harsh and unforgiving Kalahari Desert, comforted
by dreams of future riches and how they will spend all
that money from the hoodia cactus diet drug.
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