Are those items sold to hospitals, etc (and would be considered wholesale, not 
retail).  I looked at bandages, gauze pads, tape, wound ointment (Neosporin) 
that I bought at drugstores and have around the house.  Everything is dual 
labelled, dimensions on the bandages, weight on the Neosporin.




________________________________
From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
To: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]>
Sent: Fri, April 5, 2013 5:12:26 PM
Subject: [USMA:52604] Re: [USMA:52602] FPLA question

I honestly don't think FPLA applies.  Medical supply and equipment 
manufacturers 
label how they please.  Disposeables such as bandage, gauze, or needles are USC 
exclusively, with metric mostly absent.  Syringes - the minims are gone, but 
larger sizes of 15 mL and above are also fl oz dual-labeled.  IV tubing is 
again 
USC with cm as an afterthought, if at all.  IV fluids in liters.  Surgical 
tools 
in any way reminiscent of nonmedical tools are sized in inches.  Others in mm.  

Over the past few years in medicine I got the impression that standards are 
applied in a piecemeal fashion, and every niche has its own set of units.  In 
the US, they are based on 19th century physiology (mm Hg or cm H2O for 
pressures, concentrations in g/dL, etc) or on the principle of "who got there 
first." If Americans invented it or dominated, USC units invariably make their 
way in.  Overall, medicine is metric only where it absolutely must.  Otherwise 
it falls back to the medieval units.  

Remek



----- Reply message -----
From: "Team Metric Info" <[email protected]>
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>
Subject: [USMA:52602] FPLA question
Date: Fri, Apr 5, 2013 14:49



Does anyone know how drug and medical devices became exempt from FPLA- they are 
metric-only correct? Did the FDA just give them a waiver or did someone seek 
congressional approval/ amendment?
        * Basic Requirements: The FPLA requires each package of household 
"consumer 
commodities" that is included in the coverage of the FPLA to bear a label on 
which there is:
        * a statement identifying the commodity, e.g., detergent, sponges, etc.;
        * the name and place of business of the manufacturer, packer, or 
distributor;
        * and the net quantity of contents in terms of weight, measure, or 
numerical 
count (measurement must be in both metric and inch/pound units).
        * Purpose of the Act: The FPLA is designed to facilitate value 
comparisons and 
to prevent unfair or deceptive packaging and labeling of many household 
"consumer commodities."
        * FDA: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) administers the FPLA with 
respect 
to foods, drugs, cosmetics, and medical devices. The FTC administers the FPLA 
with respect to other "consumer commodities" that are consumed or expended in 
the household.

Reply via email to