Washington » Senators have reached an agreement on more modest dietary supplement safeguards that would make it easier to crackdown on products that could hurt people.
The move comes only a few days after Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz, stepped away from a tougher bill because of the concerns expressed by Sen. Orrin Hatch, who is a major supporter of the dietary supplement industry, one of Utah's biggest sectors.
McCain and his co-sponsor Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., announced the agreement in a letter sent to Hatch, R-Utah, and two other supplement supporters, Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, and Sen. Mike Enzi, R-Wyo.
The letter, released Wednesday evening, outlines four areas of "common ground" the senators plan to fold into a larger bipartisan food safety bill.
The five senators agree to:
» Require all dietary supplement companies to register with the federal government.
» Give the Food and Drug Administration the ability to issue "a mandatory recall order" if there is a reasonable probability a supplement is spiked or could cause serious health problems.
» Push the FDA to more quickly publish guidelines on new dietary ingredients.
» Require the FDA to notify the Drug Enforcement Administration if the agency finds an ingredient contains a steroid.
"We feel strongly that these additional safeguards are necessary to protect those who take dietary
The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, or USADA, has joined with major sports leagues to push for more restrictions on dietary supplements, saying it is too easy for rogue companies to spike bodybuilding products with steroids.
The original McCain-Dorgan bill was modeled on USADA's concerns and would have required supplement makers to provide proof as to the safety of their products. The companies would also have to hand over any customer complaint to the government.
Hatch worried these steps would lead to a pre-market approval process for supplements, which the government now considers a food not a drug. Such approval, Hatch has contended, could increase costs for the dietary supplement makers and limit their availability to the public.
Before the agreement, the Utah senator urged McCain to stand with him in a fight against "over-regulatory regimes and mounds of costly government bureaucracy."



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