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History of Food Regulation and the FDA

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History of Food Regulation and the FDA Food Law FSC-421 Ancient Food Regulation 370-285 BC Enquiry Into Plants Theophrastus Treatise on plants as sources of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: History of Food Regulation and the FDA


1
History of Food Regulation and the FDA
  • Food LawFSC-421

2
Ancient Food Regulation
  • 370-285 BC Enquiry Into Plants Theophrastus
  • Treatise on plants as sources of food and
    medicine
  • Noted that balsum gum was mixed with adulterants
    for economic reasons
  • 234-149 BC Treatise On Agriculture Cato
  • Noted use of boiled down musk, salt, marble dusk
    and resin in wines
  • Method to determine if wine watered down

3
Ancient Food Regulation
  • 23-79 AD Natural History Pliny the Elder
  • Adulteration of breads with chalk and peppers
    with juniper berries
  • so many poisons are used to force wine to suit
    our taste and we are surprised that it is not
    wholesome
  • Greatest aid to health is moderation in food
  • Urged use of kitchen gardens

4
Ancient Food Regulation
  • 131-201 AD Galen Roman physician
  • Warned against adulteration of pepper
  • Stellionatus
  • where anyone has substituted some articles for
    another or has put aside goods which he was
    obligated to deliver, or has spoiled them, he is
    liable for this offense

5
Middle Ages
  • England - government decided price of food
    should be determined by its quality
  • 1266 - Sale of any corrupted wine, meat, fish,
    bread or water that is not wholesome for mans
    body prohibited
  • 1844 - Trade Guilds were major regulatory body
  • Searched and seized unwholesome products
  • 1820 - Treatise of Adulteration of Food and
    Culinary Poisons Frederick Accum

6
Early Food Regulation in the US
  • Simple and local food production and distribution
    systems
  • Consumer could exert substantial influence over
    purity or wholesomeness
  • Most foods grown by users, neighbors or from
    local marketplace where handling and production
    of produce could be observed

7
Early Food Regulation in the US
  • English experience worked at first
  • Population increased
  • Growing urban communities
  • Reliance upon food retailers for surveillance
    of handling and production
  • Now retailer exerted the influence over suppliers

8
Colonial Food Laws
  • Food Law in US is 300 years old
  • 1646 Massachusetts Bread Law set price for a
    loaf of bread at one penny and decree how much
    it should weigh
  • Official inspectors could enter homes and seize
    light bread
  • Baking of bread was first commercial food
    activity in new world

9
Colonial Food Laws
  • Profits increased if short short weights and
    used cheap ingredients like chalk and ground
    beans
  • Mass, and NY enacted laws to inspect flour for
    worms
  • 1641 inspection of exported fish, and meat to
    improve trade relationships

10
General Food Law
  • First State law applying to foods generally
    instead of a specific product
  • 1785 Act Against Selling Unwholesome Provisions
  • where some evilly disposed persons from motives
    of avarice and filthy lucre, have been induced to
    sell diseased, corrupted, contagious or
    unwholesome provisions to the great nuisance of
    public health and peace..
  • Punished by fine, imprisonment, standing in
    pillory

11
Early Food Laws
  • Iowa 1838 Act to punish Vendors of Unwholesome
    Liquors and Provisions
  • Oregon Territory 1848 adopted Iowa Act
  • California 1850 regulated sale of unwholesome
    provision under Offenses Against Public Morality,
    Health and Police Law (exercise of police power?)

12
State vs. Federal Laws
  • Complications when foods crossed state boundaries
  • Conflicts of Laws
  • Imported product more suspicious than locality
    produced products (Turf) b/c of lack of ability
    of scrutinize handling
  • States needed to cooperate to trade

13
Early Federal Regulation
  • 1789 Act for Laying a Duty on Goods, Wares and
    Merchandize Imported into the US
  • Place duty of specific food items (booze,
    molasses, sugar, coffee, cheese) to control
    quantities coming into US (Imported)
  • 1883 Impure Tea Act prevented importation of
    adulterated teas
  • Provided for inspections for purity and fitness

14
Prohibition
  • Booze only food product which has been the
    subject of a Constitution Amendment
  • 18th Amendment prohibited manufacture, sale or
    transportation, importation or exportation of
    intoxicating liquors
  • Repealed December 18th 1933
  • Followed by Alcohol Administration Act
  • Protection from adulterated or misbranded articles

15
Oleomargarine
  • Subject of early food legislation b/c of
    competition between manufacturers and dairy
    farmers
  • 1879 Act for Protection of Dairymen and to
    prevent deception in sales of butter and cheese
    in District of Columbia
  • Margarine must be stamped Margarine

16
Inflence of Economics
  • Congress believed food supply was local matter
    and should be left to States
  • 1880s American Dress beef, and bacon strong in
    export market to Europe
  • Europe started to reject American beef b/c of
    encounters with diseased beef
  • Congress acted to save US beef export market

17
Influence of Economics
  • 1889 Secretary of Agriculture called for national
    inspection of cattle and condemnation of unfit
    carcasses
  • Prohibited importation of diseased cattle
  • Congress took positive action to improve the
    quality of the food supply

18
The Jungle
  • Published February 1906
  • Set in Chicago stockyards
  • Upton Sinclair, novelist concerned with
    unsanitary conditions in meat packing plants
  • President Theodore Roosevelt read book and called
    for investigation
  • 4 months later, Meat Inspection Amendment was
    passed as small part of appropriations bill, not
    a separate act of Congress

19
Harvey Wiley
  • First Chief Chemist of Bureau of Chemistry of
    USDA
  • Examined foods for evidence of adulteration
  • Formed Poison Squad
  • President of AOAC for 25 years
  • Helped to develop sugar industry in US

20
Pure Foods (1906)
  • 1906 Senate Committee on Manufacturers
    recommended a Pure Food Law
  • Dr. Wiley played big role lobbying
  • Standards established for many imported foods
  • Six new branch laboratories of Division of
    Chemistry established

21
Cocaine
  • Coca - aine ("Fruit of the Coca plant")
  • Toot, snow, white powder, young girl, blow
  • No laws prohibiting drug sales or use
  • Cocaine used as Pep pills and prescribed to
    women for medicinal purposes
  • Cocaine treatment centers treated addicts and
    Cocaine freely prescribed by doctors

22
Cocaine
  • Opium use prohibited in the west in the early
    1900s due to perception that it caused Asians to
    become violent
  • Cocaine use prohibited in south due to perception
    that it caused cocaine crazed negroes that
    could not be stopped by regular bullets

23
Cocaine
  • Prior to 1906, cocaine freely used in food
    products, (coca cola), medicines
  • Given freely to migrant and dock worker because
    increased their productivity
  • Southern fears of violence from drug crazed
    minorities prompted call for some type of
    regulation of cocaine and opium

24
Cocaine Regulation
  • Result was congressional action to introduce
    control legislation
  • Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906 was first attempt
    to regulate drugs and foods
  • Doctors no longer prescribed cocaine and all
    Treatment centers were closed
  • Patients became addicts / Doctors became pushers
    / Black market developed

25
Pure Food and Drug Act 1906
  • Passed June 22, 1906
  • an act for preventing the manufacture, sale, or
    transportation of adulterated or misbranded or
    poisonous or deleterious food, drugs, medicines
    and liquors.

26
Institutional History The FDA
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