Official online community of SupplyExpo

  Current | By Company | NEW Products | Free Newsletters
Login ID:    Password:    Register for a FREE account
 NEWS

Industry News
Business
Organic
Food & Beverage
Sports Nutrition
Nutraceuticals
Regulatory
Research
Products
Practitioners
Retail
Events
People
On-line


 LISTINGS
  Categories
Products

Profiles
Publishers

 OPINION
  Editorials
Interviews
Up and Comers
Quality Initiatives

 
Blogs
Andrew Stewart  
Marc Ullman FYI Blog
Len Monheit Off The Cuff
James S. Tonkin - Formulating Beverages  
Jim Lassiter -- Good News/Bad News
The Nutrition Business Journal Blog

Join the NPIcenter LinkedIn Group Group
Join the Facebook page Page
Follow us on
Join the Facebook page


 FEATURES
 

Newsletter

  News Feeds
 
 SERVICES
  Log in
Register User
Add Company
Career Center
Advertise

 INFO CENTER
  Help
Contact Us
About NPI
Privacy Policy



 

Advertisement



Share Subscribe to NPIcenter Newsfeed

AHPA's Letter to the Editor Sets the Record Straight in Today's Boston Globe
2009-11-13 - American Herbal Products Association (AHPA)




Under the headline “Key distinction on FDA, supplements,” the Boston Globe today published American Herbal Products Association (AHPA) President Michael McGuffin’s letter to the editor responding to the paper’s recent editorial, “Police these pills and powders.”  

In its Nov. 2 editorial, the Globe opines that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) lacks adequate power to regulate dietary supplements. “Under the current law,” the Globe writes, “the FDA can take action against manufacturers of supplements with harmful ingredients only after there are reports of bad reactions among users.”

“In fact,” AHPA President McGuffin explains in his letter, “synthetic steroids are not allowed in supplements, and the FDA has issued 28 warning letters since 2004 against companies marketing such products. These actions were taken based not on adverse events, but on claims made on product labels and on FDA analyses.”

The Boston Globe editorial follows and references an Oct. 15 New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) opinion piece by Dr. Pieter Cohen, Harvard Medical School. The NEJM piece, like the Globe editorial, fails to distinguish between dietary supplements and illegal drugs and alleges FDA does not have sufficient authority to regulate supplements. AHPA also submitted a letter to the editor of NEJM.

“Legally labeled dietary supplements are required to list every contained ingredient,” McGuffin concludes in his Boston Globe letter. “Any product that fails to do so is misbranded, and the FDA, under current law, can seize the product and issue warnings or bring criminal actions against its marketers.”

AHPA’s letter to the editor is published online at: http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/letters/articles/2009/11/13/key_distinction_on_fda_supplements/

All of AHPA’s recent letters to the editor are available on the AHPA Web site at: http://www.ahpa.org/Default.aspx?tabid=187

The American Herbal Products Association (AHPA) is the national trade association and voice of the herbal products industry. AHPA is comprised of domestic and foreign companies doing business as growers, processors, manufacturers and marketers of herbs and herbal products, including foods, dietary supplements, cosmetics, and nonprescription drugs. Founded in 1982, AHPA’s mission is to promote the responsible commerce of herbal products. Website: www.ahpa.org

Related Articles :

  • Senator Hatch Calls for Greater Enforcement Resources to Deal with Illegal Steroid Products (2009-09-30)
    As the ranking member at a hearing before the Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Crime and Drugs Subcommittee, Senator Orrin Hatch (R-UT) renewed his commitment to continue to push for more resources for the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) to enforce existing laws against the marketing of illegal steroids that masquerade as dietary supplements.
  • AHPA to FDA: Provide Efficient Enforcement Against Illegal Steroid Products (2009-10-08)
    The American Herbal Products Association has suggested that the Food & Drug Administration adapt its current and successful enforcement program against fraudulent 2009 H1N1 products and apply it to illegal synthetic steroid products.
  • AHPA Opens Nominations for 2010 Industry Awards (2009-11-10)
    The American Herbal Products Association is seeking nominations for its 2010 AHPA Awards. These annual awards, launched in 2006, acknowledge individuals and organizations making substantive, positive contributions to the herbal products industry.
  •  




    Sponsored Links: Featured Links:
     

    NPIcenter Address and Phone Number
    Contact Us | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Advertise
    New Hope Natural Media

     

    SUPPLYEXPO Funtional Foods & Nutraceuticals Magazine Healthy Foods Conferences The Newport Summit - Executive Retreat Nutracon