Posted on 10/25/2011 6:55:05 PM PDT by truthfinder9
Since hes having trouble getting his own bill passed, hes trying a different approach to get the same results.
For weeks we have been telling you about Sen. Dick Durbins disastrous Dietary Supplement Labeling Act, which attempts to impose harsh limits on supplement availability by giving the FDA major new powers to make arbitrary standards and rules that will curtail supplement sales.
Initially it orders the FDA to compile, with help from the Institute of Medicine, a list of dietary ingredients (read: supplements) that could lead to adverse events or are otherwise deemed risky in some way. But creating lists of bad ingredients or bad doses based on completely arbitrary or non-existent standards is a slippery slope.
Now Sen. Durbin has proposed an amendment to an appropriations (budget) bill, which is a sneaky way of getting controversial laws passed without too much attention. The amendment would have the Government Accountability Office (GAO) assess the effectiveness and utility of the FDAs adverse event reporting (AER) system, and report to Congress on what actions FDA is taking to ensure that dietary supplement manufacturers are reporting adverse events; how the AER system informs the public of FDAs efforts to protect consumers; and, most especially, whether FDA has implemented the recommendations GAO made in its 2009 report on dietary supplements.
Buried in the GAOs recommendations in its 2009 report are some of the same provisions that are also in Durbins unpopular Dietary Supplement Labeling Act. In our article on the report, we noted that the GAO recommended:
increased supplement labeling regulationsone of the Durbin bills main goals; a clear delineation to be made between food and supplementsa first step toward treating supplements as drugsthis is also in the Durbin bill, and its the particular clause we feared he would slip into the appropriations bill; and an increase in AER requirements: currently only severe adverse events must be reported, but this would force AERs to be filed even for the most minor events.
The GAO undermined its own recommendation in the report by acknowledging that FDA officials told us that the current regulatory framework is sufficient to identify and act on safety concerns regarding foods with added dietary ingredients. This supports ANH-USAs assertion that the FDA is already well equipped and needs no additional authority to do its job.
Furthermore, the number of supplement AERs is quite lowonly 1,080 in 2008. And keep in mind that over half the US population (at least 154 million individuals) take nutritional supplements, according to data from 2007 National Health Interview Survey. The supplement AER figure is even lower when compared to the 526,527 prescription drug AERs in 2008. In other words, for every adverse event from supplements, there are 488 adverse events from prescription drugs!
Remember that it took the deaths of 55,000 Americans before FDA considered pulling Vioxx off the shelves.
The fact that Sen. Durbin has suggested this appropriations amendment indicates that he no longer has high hopes for the Durbin bill. Thanks to all the messages youve been sending Congress, he is having a difficult time gaining support for ithe has only been able to find one senator so far who is willing to co-sponsor his billand so hes trying to pressure FDA into implementing the bills goals via the regulatory system. We believe it is also an attempt to lay stronger groundwork to push his bill through legislatively, once he gets the ball rolling and FDA starts to treat supplements more like drugs.
We should also note that Sen. Durbin was the architect of the current AER system, but he was unhappy with the political compromise that was struck when the law was passed originallySens. Hatch and Harkin agreed to a reporting system so long as it was only for severe events. Now we see Durbin pushing a requirement to have all adverse events be reported, no matter how minor.
What Sen. Durbin clearly wants is for every supplement to be approved by the FDA before it is sold. Everything he does is intended to move things in that direction.
There are fundamental objections to this. First, the FDA is biased in favor of drugs, probably because drugs pay the FDAs bills. Since the agency sees supplements as competition for drugs, not many will be approved. Second, the agency will demand supplement trials just like drug trialswhich is not appropriate for supplements. Supplements are like food: it is the combination and balance of what you take that matters, not just the effect of one pill. Third, the cost of complying with the pre-approval process will make supplements, already beyond many peoples budget, too expensive for all but the rich.
If this powerful senator cant win using the direct approach, hell try an end-run. It may be politics as usual, but when it affects your familys health, its time to fight back. Well keep you posted on the maneuvering around appropriations bills.
In the meantime, if you havent yet sent a message to Congress about the Durbin bill, please do it now! But just as important, the appropriations bill is scheduled to be voted on by next Monday, October 31, at which time Sen. Durbin will try to add his amendment. Please write your senators today and stop this language dead in its tracks!
And this Durbin character has stock in or owns which pharmaceutical companies?
Let me guess... it’s Mr. Codex Allimentary himself...
Commander McQueeg....
The nightmare from hell that will NOT go away!
Just guessing but I bet that I am correct!
Dick Turbin is a POS. FUDD!
of course he is using this nonsense to get his name some fame- is he the one who is trying to get chewing tobacco outlawed for baseball too?? He is so important to society since he chooses to look at the BIGGER ISSUES!
The Left keeps trying to sneak this stuff in.
Why don’t any of the good guys in Washington propose legislation to protect Health Freedom?
Those Bastards need term limits. Every one that has long tenure gets carried away.
>>And this Durbin character has stock in or owns which pharmaceutical companies?
I would check too where Durbin gets his campaign donations.
Drug companies would be NO surprise.
Its time for this federal government to stop trying to take over complete Nazi-like control of vitamins and supplements!
Just an example of what could happen: Vitamin D3 is gaining more adherents daily, even from the medical community, for the multitude of ailments it addresses, and it’s extremely cheap.
But pharmaceutical companies are already synthesizing Vitamin D3 substitutes that will do the same thing, but only be available by prescription, at you-can-guess prices.
Now all that remains is for the cheap, readily available version to be made “unavailable” over the counter via regulations, and the money train can roll.
I don’t like conspiracy theories generally, but if you can’t buy cheap vitamin D3 in two or three years, it will, indeed, be due to a conspiracy. Hopefully, this conspiracy theory holds no more water than most of the other ones, but I’m concerned and so are others.
I don’t think it’s just campaign donations....I swear I heard this week that Congress Critters have NO insider trading rules applied to THEM.....they refuse to write a rule like that for themselves...
Mark to read later...
A man who ought to know told about the weekly “unmarked manila envelope” that arrived in the mailboxes of the legislators crusading for the “right” issues, every week, as regular as clockwork.....and I believe it. Why else would they, once elected, practically kill to hold onto their gravy train gig?!
Thanks, Fu.
Ping
Exactly! How cleverly diabolical to impoverish us even more, complimenting the high and increasing medical costs punishing us with Obamacare .. then to synchronize with this, compounding our suffering and poverty therein with more doc visits and prescription supplements.
Damn them all!
I know the feeling I take DHEA and this turd along with Juan McCain wants to ban it as a anabolic steroid. Yes its banned in NCAA sports because its a precursor hormone that makes testosterone. I am a mid 30’s guy who exercises and it makes me feel strong and puts me in a better mood. Who are these jackasses to say what I can take and what I cant.
FYI, in case you haven’t seen this yet...
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