Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition (CFSAN) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition (CFSAN)

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Subset organization of the FDA ... Regulate policies governing the safety of dietary supplements, infant formulas, ... www.fda.gov/opacom/factsheets ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition (CFSAN)


1
Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition
(CFSAN)
  • Golriz Khadem
  • And
  • Ryan Leitz

2
OVERVIEW of CFSAN
  • Subset organization of the FDA
  • Established between the FDA and the University of
    Maryland in April 1996.

3
MISSION OF CFSAN
  • responsible for promoting and protecting the
    publics health by ensuring that the nations
    food supply is safe, sanitary, wholesome,
    honestly and properly labeled
  • To regulate 240 billion worth of domestic food,
    15 billion worth of imported foods, and 15
    billion worth of cosmetics sold through
    interstate commerce

4
CASH FLOW
  • Consumer for every dollar spent, twenty-five
    cents goes to products regulated by the FDA75
    of that goes towards food products regulated
    specifically by the CFSAN!
  • FDA In year 2000, 280 million spent on food
    and cosmetic safety activities

5
RESPONSIBILITIES
  • Five major responsibilities include
  • Monitor substances added to food (ionizing
    radiation, color additives) for safety
  • Assure no harmful products result through
    processes of bioengineered foods (allergens,
    nutrients rejected for uptake by the body,
    toxicants)
  • Regulate the proper labeling of food and
    cosmetics (ingredients, nutrition health claims)
    and their ingredients

6
RESPONSIBILITIES CONTD
  • Regulate policies governing the safety of dietary
    supplements, infant formulas, and medical foods
  • Consumer education and industry outreach

7
FOOD SAFETY CONCERNS
  • Pathogens/diseases (mad cow, E. coli)
  • Toxins (mercury levels in shellfish)
  • Harmful dietary supplements (ephedra)
  • Allergens (eggs, peanuts, milk)
  • Overdosing levels of dietary components
  • Product tampering (esp. post 9/11 with
    bioterrorism)

8
AUTHORITY
  • Food and Drugs Act of 1906
  • Prohibits interstate commerce in misbranded and
    adulterated foods, drinks, and drugs
  • Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of 1938
  • Same as above, extended to cosmetics. Also puts
    burden of proof on drug manufacturers to show
    their drug works as intended and without harm to
    the public. Sets standards for an identity,
    quality, and amount for foods.
  • Public Health Service Act of 1944
  • Regulation of biological products and control of
    communicable diseases.
  • Fair Packing and Labeling Act of 1966
  • Applied to food, drugs, cosmetics, and medical
    devices requires products to be honestly and
    informatively labeled.

9
AUTHORITY CONTD
  • Infant Formula Act of 1980
  • Ensures necessary nutritional content and safety
  • Nutrition Labeling and Education Act of 1990
  • Requires nutritional information to be present on
    all food items terms low fat and light are
    standardized
  • Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of
    1994.
  • Establishes specific labeling on dietary
    supplements and dietary ingredients and
    classifies them as food

10
CONCLUSION
  • Although the food supply in the U.S. is
    considered the safest in the world, there is
    always room for improvementhence the task of
    this organization
  • Foodborne illness has been estimated to cause
    about 76 million illnesses, 325,000
    hospitalizations, and 5,000 deaths per year in
    the U.S.

11
CONCLUSION CONTD
  • A major program established in January 2001 is
    the Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point
    (HACCP), which was originally created to monitor
    fruit and vegetable juice production.
  • Purpose of HACCP is to provide preventive
    controls at the most contamination-prone points
    in the production process.

12
SOURCES CITED
  • www.cfsan.fda.gov/lrd/cfsan4.html
  • www.cfsan.fda.gov/mileston.html
  • www.fda.gov/opacom/factsheets/justthefacts/2cfsan.
    html
  • www.jifsan.umd.edu
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