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No Rita,
Not Gratis,
  In all reality everyone who purchases
a drug pays twice, once as a taxpayer,and once as a consumer.
Do away with the FDA ,as an entity under US Department of Health
and Human Services, and set it up with a group of scientists or as
a private enterprise, using the funding currently paid to the FDA.
   Drug Companies pay
to have drugs tested too, get them in on a re-evaluation of the FDA.
There just has to be a better way,and the history of the FDA
  proves they are too slow!!!

The average time for approval from the FDA is 18 months,
All PWP's know what 18 months does to their bodies,
especially after they have had it a number of years.
How many new drugs do you think are sitting there waiting
for FDA approval which would be of use to us now?

Things have changed since the FDA was set up in 1906 , and if
one reads the History of the FDA you'll see it takes them too
long to get anything done, always has!

I'm including this for persons who don't have research capabilities:
This is from Encarta 1998, which I have in my computer.
There are many, many books written on the history of the FDA
is someone cares to read more about it, go to your favorite library.
If they don't have a book on it, they will be happy to do an
ILL (inter library loan) for you, and they will gladly find titles
of books for you on the History of the FDA.


<SNIP>
The Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act was enacted in 1938 requiring that
new drugs be safe for humans; however, it did not require that
manufacturers prove their drugs' effectiveness. It would be 24 years before
legislation was passed that would require proof of the efficacy of new
drugs (the Kefaver-Harris Amendments, 1962). Enforcement of this law was
entrusted to the FDA.
Two laws enacted in the 1960s strengthened the FDA's efforts to reduce drug
abuse. The Drug Abuse Control Amendments of 1965 provided penalties for the
illegal sale or possession of stimulants, sedatives, and hallucinogens, and
the Narcotic Addict Rehabilitation Act of 1966 set up a federal program for
addicts that provided them with the option of receiving treatment for their
drug problems in place of a prison sentence.
In 1970 the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act established
rules for manufacturing and prescribing habit-forming drugs. It stipulated
that physicians can prescribe all drugs, but a special license is required
to prescribe drugs with a high abuse potential. This license is issued by
the Drug Enforcement Administration.
The Anti-Drug Abuse Acts, signed into law in 1986 and 1988, set up funding
for the treatment of drug abuse and for the creation of law-enforcement
programs to fight the illegal sale of drugs. These acts also detailed
severe punishments for individuals selling and possessing drugs illegally.
Harsh penalties for using anabolic steroids (hormones that promote the
storage of protein and the growth of tissue that are sometimes abused by
competitive athletes) were included in the 1988 act, along with the
requirement that all alcoholic beverages be labeled with warnings about
alcohol's potentially dangerous effect on the body. The 1988 act also
established the Office of National Drug Control Policy to develop an action
plan that would involve the public, as well as private agencies, in
eliminating the illegal sale of drugs; in helping individuals who use drugs
to stop; and in preventing nonusers from ever starting to use drugs.
The U.S. government and its regulatory agencies continually monitor the
development and use of all drugs sold in the United States to ensure that
the American public has access only to drugs that are safe and effective.
Recently, the FDA introduced legislation requiring warning labels on all
over-the-counter medication after research indicated that the nonaspirin
pain reliever acetaminophen can cause liver damage when taken in high doses
with large quantities of alcohol.
 >END>

Maybe it's possible that the FDA has too much to do, and not enough help,
but it certainly
needs to be brought up to speed, 18 months for approval is unacceptable in
this century.

just me,
Marjorie
68/58/55




At 09:39 AM 11/02/2000 -0500, you wrote:
>Marjorie said.......
>
>"MOHO, the FDA gives a new meaning to the expression "Slower than molasses
>on a cold day in January".  Also in my own humble opinion, the FDA should=20
>be removed from
>Federal Control and turned over to a private group of scientists!!!!! But=20
>then no
>one ever asked me for my opinion!"
>
>and Rita asks.......Who is going to pay for the FDA program if the taxpayers
>don't?
>Someone must foot the bill.....where will the private group of scientists get
>the money?.......or is this just to be a "gratis" thing that is added on to
>the research platter?
>
>Rita Weeks  56/11