hCG drops have become the latest dieting craze in Texas
Several weight loss clinics across the Lone Star State have agreed to change the way they market the controversial drug hCG, which is being used by many for weight loss.
The Texas Attorney General’s Office reported on Thursday morning that clinics in San Antonio, Houston and the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex are making the changes.
The clinics agreed to stop marketing and advertising chorionic gonadatropin (hCG) as a weight loss product.
The hormone has become the latest dieting craze and is being marketed across Texas as a “homeopathic” product.
Many Texas residents, including some in the Rio Grande Valley, are using hCG along with a severe diet to lose weight.
The Texas Attorney General’s Office reports that hCG is not approved the Federal Drug Administration (FDA) for weight loss.
The hormone is available by prescription but is generally used for testicular and ovarian abnormalities.
However, doctors are allowed to prescribe drugs for non-FDA-approved purposes.
Multiple Texas Weight-Loss Clinics Agree To Stop Marketing Prescription Drugs Improperly
Six purveyors of “hCG” to change promotional messages
AUSTIN – Under agreements negotiated by the Texas Attorney General’s Office, several weight-loss clinics and a distributor of a weight loss product in Texas must significantly alter the way they market their services and/or products. The clinics all advertised chorionic gonadatropin (hCG), a prescription hormone, for weight loss – despite the fact that hCG has never been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as a weight loss drug. The distributor advertised and sold a homeopathic version of hCG as a weight loss product, which also is not FDA-approved.
The FDA has never approved the marketing of hCG for human weight loss – and actually requires a “black box” warning on prescription labels clearly stating that it is not approved for weight loss. Although physicians are generally allowed to prescribe products for non-FDA-approved purposes, drugs cannot be marketed or advertised for a medical use unless that purpose has been approved by the FDA. As a result, physicians and weight-loss clinics may not advertise hCG for weight loss in part because the FDA has stated there is no substantial evidence indicating that hCG leads to weight loss, beyond that which stems from severe dieting. There are no approved homeopathic or over-the-counter hCG products. The drug’s FDA-approved uses are primarily for testicular or ovarian abnormalities.
The following businesses have agreed to stop advertising hCG for weight loss: Biohealth of Texas, LLC, which operated in at least a dozen north Texas cities; Weight Control of Texas, Inc., based in San Antonio; Gulf Coast Plastic Surgery, P.A. of Houston; Dragon’s Breath Massage of Keller; and Optimum Health Care, LLC of Pantego. Professional Health Products Southwest of Arlington agreed to stop advertising and distributing homeopathic hCG.