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Josefa Fund, Professor Henri Joyeux and Professor Jean-Bernard Fourtillan #quack gentside.co.uk

This just might be the most surreal story of the year. In the Poitou region, several hundred Parkinson's and Alzheimer's patients were illegally recruited by members of a non-profit called the Josefa Fund to test a new melatonin derivative treatment. in a monastery. A patient told his doctor, who then alerted the ANSM, and the case was immediately brought to court. The Paris prosecutor's office's health unit is investigating the matter, according to Le Figaro.

"We discovered that at least 350 people were recruited to participate in an experiment to test skin patches that deliver valentonin, a derivative of melatonin, the sleep hormone. The aim of the experiment was to treat serious diseases such as Alzheimer's or Parkinson's. The trial was conducted without any authorization, illegally, and with no knowledge of the effects of these substances," explains Bernard Celli, the ANSM's inspection director. "A risk to the health of the participants cannot be excluded." Especially considering that the patients were asked to stop their usual treatment for the duration of the trial. "This can lead to serious complications," says Professor Philippe Damier, a neurologist at the University Hospital of Nantes.

A non-profit called the Josefa Fund is at the head of this strange project. On its website, this rather mystical fund is described as a "spiritual foundation," and claims that neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's or Parkinson's are caused by a "sleep/wake system." Hence the use of melatonin patches. "This is borderline charlatanism," warns the ANSM. Anne Josso, secretary-general of Miviludes (a government agency that detects sects), says that the task force that fights against sectarian deviances had already reported this fund's "disturbing" activities in December 2018.

The president of the fund is a "chemical engineer and pharmacist" (according to his online CV), Professor Jean-Bernard Fourtillan, 76. And the vice president is none other than professor Henri Joyeux, who is known for his controversial stance on vaccines.

A part of these "informal" experiments took place in a monastery, the Sainte-Croix abbey in Saint-BenoƮt, near Poitiers. "Some patients stayed there overnight," says Bernard Celli. These patients were given the hormone patch in the evening, then had their blood drawn in the morning. The ANSM was able to trace back to this trial thanks to the recent investigation of a laboratory that collected the blood samples. Participants were reportedly asked to make a donation to the Josefa Fund. "We'll get to the bottom of this," says the ANSM.

The danger of these experiments lies mainly in the fact that this treatment is not at all certified, recommended or verified by the scientific community.