FDA calls cheerios an "unapproved Drug".The Food and Drug Administration has issued a warning letter to cereal manufacturer General Mills for claiming on its cereal box that Cheerios can help lower cholesterol, and for saying on its website that "diets rich in whole grain foods can reduce the risk of heart disease." The letter calls these proclamations "serious violations" of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act The United States Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (abbreviated as FFDCA, FDCA, or FD&C), is a set of laws passed by Congress in 1938 giving authority to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to oversee the safety of food, drugs, and cosmetics. and applicable regulations. The FDA stated that, based on the claims made, Cheerios now is an unapproved un·ap·proved adj. Not approved or sanctioned: an unapproved vaccine; an unapproved protest march. drug, and must go through the agency's new drug approval process. The American Association for Health Freedom, Arlington, Va., points out that the FDA has issued warning letters in the past to various food producers to keep them from telling consumers about the healthful health·ful adj. 1. Conducive to good health; salutary. 2. Healthy. health ful·ness n. nature
of their products. For instance, cherry growers were targeted and
enjoined from referencing peer-reviewed scientific articles proving the
fruit's health benefits for gout gout, condition that manifests itself as recurrent attacks of acute arthritis, which may become chronic and deforming. It results from deposits of uric acid crystals in connective tissue or joints. and arthritis. For years, the FDA
barred health claims about the benefits of fish oil for heart disease,
cancer, depression, body pain, and a number of other conditions until a
drug company paid a great deal of money to go through the approval
process.
This type of enforcement effectively censors scientific information and greatly restricts consumer access to scientific studies that provide valuable information. "On any given evening, drug companies bombard viewers with questionable advertisements about drugs with potential side effects that often include death," charges AAHF Executive Director Gretchen DuBeau. The FDA claiming "that a popular breakfast cereal has suddenly become 'an unapproved drug' is the height of absurdity. Is this the best use of the resources of an agency that is falling short in many other areas?" Concludes Tami Wahl, AAHF legislative director, "Would the FDA prefer that consumers not eat healthy foods so they can be treated after the fact with FDA-approved drugs?" |
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ful·ness n.
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