**Sneak Attack on Supplements: FDA and Senator Durbin Use Slow News Day to
Launch
Today, both the FDA and Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) dropped policy “bombs” on
those of us who use dietary supplements. It is no mere coincidence that both
were released on the Friday before a holiday weekend. By timing the
introduction of their anti-supplement legislation and regulatory guidance
this way, the FDA and Sen. Durbin are both hoping to evade negative
publicity. We think it is better to keep American citizens fully informed,
and with your help, we will get the word out. Please send this communication
far and wide.
First, the FDA has issued draft guidance for complying with the New Dietary
Ingredient (NDI) notification protocols contained by the Dietary Supplement
Health and Education Act (DSHEA). As you may recall, DSHEA said that
supplements already on sale prior to the passage of the act were
"grandfathered" in, and did not have to be reviewed by the FDA. New
supplements developed after the Act have been in a kind of limbo waiting for
the FDA to spell out the procedures to be followed.
These new supplements have always been at risk because of the uncertainly
surrounding their regulatory status. And many of these new supplements are
extremely important for our health. We won't name them, because to do would
be to put a bull’s-eye on them for the FDA to shoot at, but you would
recognize many of them and may be currently taking them.
DSHEA was passed in 1994. The FDA has thus taken *seventeen years* to
provide regulatory guidance for these new supplements. Now a draft version
of guidance is here, and it isn't good. It is just another effort by the FDA
to suffocate the supplement industry so that everything—supplements and
drugs alike—will go through the vastly expensive drug approval process, a
process that pays for FDA salaries.
We have said it before and we will say it again. Supplements cannot usually
be patented. No non-patentable substance can be taken through a drug
approval process that on average costs a billion dollars. If supplements are
treated like drugs, there simply won't be any supplements. The FDA knows
this perfectly well.
The new draft 
guidance<http://aahf.convio.net/site/R?i=oxkhWQ4mnPklnUceh_g5tQ..>is
written in the usual regulatory non-English, but buried within it are
definitions of "new supplements" that will make more and more supplements
subject to the new rules. The rules themselves are designed to make it
harder and harder to market new supplements, all of which will need to
submit notification to an agency that is fundamentally hostile to the
supplement industry. Not only does each supplement require its own
notification, a separate notification must be submitted by each company that
offers it. Additionally, notification must be submitted again if the
supplement is reformulated in any way or offered in combination with any
other supplement or ingredient. Based on what the FDA has done in the past,
many more applications will be rejected than accepted and the cost of the
whole process will be high.
The FDA is required to give us 90 days to comment on their proposed
guidance. Our experts are busy analyzing the proposal in all its detail and
we will report on it again and provide an Action Alert in our next
newsletter right after the holiday. We already know this needs to be
stopped. With your help we will do everything we can to change it. Your
ability to use supplements not already documented as having been on the
market under the same exact name and formulation prior to 1994 will depend
on it.
As we mentioned above, Sen. Durbin’s much-feared Dietary Supplement Labeling
Act of 2011 (S.1310) has been formally introduced in Congress. The language
is not available online yet, but the draft procured by ANH-USA yesterday
reaffirmed the analysis we sent you earlier this
week<http://aahf.convio.net/site/R?i=Uu_SEs2JkuLp5Eo85Dp_hw..>.
Look for our in-depth article and Action Alert on S.1310 in our newsletter
on Tuesday, July 5th!


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