QUOTE (kbtoyssni @ Feb 13 2008, 02:41 PM)

My first response was that maybe this will increase awareness and diagnosis if drug manufacturers are promoting the disease. BUT - I worry that the diagnosis will be taken lightly. I think of the few people I know with lactose intolerance and they take lactase most of the time, but not all of the time. I also don't want this to affect my ability to get truly gluten-free food. It's certainly my biggest personal worry - will restaurants stop taking me seriously if they think I can just take a pill?
Yeah, now that might be a real concern. Let's face it, the entire medical industry is an "after the fact" sort of thing. They are
reactive, not
proactive. In other words, people seem to seek medical attention or take care of themselves only after something goes wrong.
QUOTE (jerseyangel @ Feb 13 2008, 04:26 PM)

This is my thinking too. They said in the report that they are testing it on Celiacs, but it may of use with other autoimmune diseases.
What I wonder is, will this pill have any effect on other food protein intolerances?
Now that's a really good point. I mean, if it can help other conditions, then it must block other molecules, right? So that tells me there will be more malabsorption due to certain things being blocked. Maybe the initial reaction from gluten doesn't occur, but then you'll have to wait till the drug wears off, then swallow heaps of supplements to make up for the loss of all the nutrients. Great, so it turns good food into junk food. Yet another medical marvel.
I hope that's not what's happening, but something tells me it is, or at the very least it will turn out to do more harm than good. But chances are we just won't know about it until people start dying.