I don't expect the medical system to fund the approval process for cuminaldehyde as a PEM blocker, since it only worked for me. I also don't expect the government to ban cumin.
Herein one has to understand the distinction between synthetic medications and natural nutrition.
New synthetic medications of course have to be thoroughly tested about possible acute or long term toxicity.
The GRAS status (generally recognized as safe) given by the FDA to nutrition for millennia in human use without obvious ill effects is reasonable. But for synthetics, not really rigorously tested by independent researchers, isn't at all. And a clear overreach in their competence.
FDA regulated health claims shows another power overreach. Even if they only help 1% of medicated, as with Statins, health claims are legal, A much higher percentage staying healthy with nutrition and healthy lifestyle factors isn't allowed to claim the same for its ingredients? Here investment money only, which has the power to influence policies and brute state force, rules. No conspiracy.
Not so in the Indian Ayurveda system to health, where Cumin has been approved for thousands of years. Just do think of the possibility to prohibit a natural healthy herb without ill-effect and due to a health claim is perverted interests overreach.
https://www.ayurtimes.com/jeera-cumin-seeds-cuminum-cyminum/
even the tortilla is contaminated.
Mexico seems to fight hard for its Tortillas not to be made of GMO corn any further. Which isn't considered GRAS, other than by FDA believers.
by leaving the comfort of a zip code, all the money that got spent on health plans, is defeated.
Yeah, the health care in the US really looks weirdest of all to Europeans. On the other hand, in most of the world there exist really rudimentary health care only. Example Myanmar: an appendix operation in a Government hospital costs 100,-$. Five times as much if one wants to increase changes of survival. Many Burmese simply have neither of those 2 choices.
So it's currently unclear if Metformin is in fact helping anyone.
One always has to weight possible benefits to risks in individual cases. In the case of Metformin, especially consider the non-severity of its only temporary risks:
1 in 6 were harmed (gastrointestinal events—nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal discomfort)
Also, how a medication is used. I, for example, can control blood sugar as pre-diabetic since many years with a clean diet. But on vacations n India, with regularly available otherwise healthy traditional food, I need some carbs to delute its hotness. Here I trialed Metformin, hang on through the initial vomiting and diarrhea, until well tolerated. Only take it on my yearly vacation to India, to avoid too high blood sugar during the time there. For which it works.
This year I had new-onset rheumatoid arthritis before my Indian vacation (not definitely diagnosed yet; specialist appointment is by November only). Increased anti-inflammatory Ayurvedic herbal extracts in India to its max, which improved joint-pains greatly. Just today on reflection I realized, Metformin is actually good at reducing cytokines too..
Most take such medications with a different mindset. They think they can eat and drink anything, because the pills magically prevent them from ills. Therefore, large-scale studies too have to be taken with a grain of salt, if one isn't of this mindset, builds on synergistic interventions, and doesn't have unrealistic expectations.
You have a TCM practitioner telling you what to watch out. I used regularly blood-laboratory monitoring to see if anything goes north or south, from any intervention combined.