Bush Asks Congress To Give FDA More Money For Food Safety
Featured ArticleMain Category: Regulatory Affairs / Drug Approvals
Also Included In: Nutrition / Diet; Pharma Industry / Biotech Industry
Article Date: 11 Jun 2008 - 7:00 PDT
President Bush has asked Congress to increase the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) budget for next year by an extra 275 million dollars; the plea comes during a nationwide outbreak of salmonella food poisoining from suspected raw red tomatoes and a year marked by difficulties in regulating imported drugs such as the Chinese heparin that has been linked to dozens of deaths and hundreds of people with serious side effects.
The White House originally asked for the FDA's budget to be raised by 5.7 per cent to 2.4 billion for the next fiscal year starting in October. The extra 275 million is to enhance federal food safety programs, said US Health Secretary Michael Leavitt on Monday, according to a Reuters report.
"This additional funding will allow FDA to more rapidly take the steps necessary to meet the challenges of changing global markets and to better protect the American people," Leavitt told the press during a conference call.
Leavitt urged Congress to act quickly on the proposed budget amendment. Changes to the law to strengthen FDA powers are also being proposed by the Administration.
With the extra money the FDA could upgrade its information technology, better monitor foreign food, increase inspection of factories overseas that make medical products for the US market, and give better technical support to countries that ship products to the US, explained Leavitt.
According to an FDA press statement, the extra funds will support the food and medical product import safety framework proposed last year.
"These are not dollars these are additional people that the FDA will be able to hire with extraordinary expertise," said FDA commissioner Andrew von Eschenbach, who was also on the conference call. He said the extra 275 million would allow the agency to recruit another 490 staff members.
The FDA said in a news release on Monday that the action reflects the fundamental changes the agency is undergoing as it adapts to the "demands of the rapidly growing and changing global economy". The changes are outlined in the agency's Action Plan for Import Safety and the complementary Food Protection Plan, both of which were released last November.
In the news release Leavitt said that the FDA is moving from intervention, "where we stand at the border and try to catch things that are unsafe", to a mix of prevention with verification, by "rolling the borders back and seeking to build safety and quality into products at every step of the way before they reach American consumers".
Leavitt urged Congress to act quickly and approve the budget increase and legislative changes that will "give FDA the authority and funding it needs to enhance the safety of our food and medical products".
The FDA said that among other things, the budget increase will help the agency:
- Establish a presence in 5 countries or regions outside America.
- Ensure greater foreign compliance with FDA standards.
- Offer expedited entry for goods that are certified by trusted parties.
- Modernize its information technology systems.
- Carry out at least 1,000 more foreign inspections of food and medical product facilities.
- Carry out at least 1,000 more domestic inspections.
- Accredit highly qualified third parties to check for compliance to FDA standards.
- Require that certain high risk products also carry certification before they can be imported to the US.
- Refuse imports from firms who delay, limit, or deny the FDA access to their facilities.
- Issue mandatory recalls of food products when voluntary recalls are not working.
About one quarter of every dollar spent by consumers in the US goes on pharmaceuticals, medical devices, food, cosmetics and other products regulated by the FDA, representing about 1 trillion dollars of the US economy, according to a Reuters report.
Click here to read "Investing in FDA's Transformation", an outline of the agency's new way of operating.
Click here for more details of what the extra proposed 275 million in the FDA budget is for (scroll to bottom half of page).
Source: FDA, Reuters.
Written by: Catharine Paddock, PhD
Copyright: Medical News Today
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (2)
Better Late Than Never
posted by Monica on 11 Jun 2008 at 12:18 pmI'm confused. The FDA website says that the budget increase is 404.7 million for FY 2009 but everthing else that I've read about the budget increase has listed 275 million. Can anyone explain why there is such a gap? At any rate, I'm glad to hear that the FDA will be increasing their ranks. I just wonder where the 490 inspectors are going to come from and how long will it take to train them to inspect, thoroughly, according to FDA requirements. Finally, the Bush Administration is doing something positive to help the American people. Better late than never.
Why Is The Administration Asking When The Legislature Has Been Offering
posted by Pat on 12 Jun 2008 at 6:48 amAccording to the Wall Street Journal:
A) The FDA did not ask for it.
B) Rules about publicly disagreeing with the Presidents budget prevented them from asking.
C) Arlen Specter (Senator R-PA) doesn't understand why they are asking for a budget increase for next year instead of emergency funding for NOW. Requesting a budget increase is undermining efforts being made by Congress to approve the monies by appearing to diminish the urgency.
This is all spin on the part of the Administration to make it appear that it is taking the leadership role and driving this allocation of funds even though Congress has been working on it for a while now in spite of the efforts of the Administration to get in the way.
http://blogs.wsj.com/health/2008/06/11/sen-specter-says-fda-cant-even-ask-for-money-properly/?mod=googlenews_wsj
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