BiotechCrossing
log in 

JOB SEEKERS, Try it Now 

EMPLOYERS, POST JOBS | SEARCH RESUMES

Share
BIOTECH Jobs, Jobs in BIOTECH - BiotechCrossing.com
What Where


Search in Job Title Only

upload your resume

Select Country:


+ Browse Jobs    + Advanced Search    + Search Tips
Home >> Biotech Articles >> BioTech News >> Engineered Food and the FDA
  • BioTech News
Engineered Food and the FDA

by Hardeep Arora     
To get bioengineered medicines, grains, vegetables, and animals on the market for human consumption, U.S. biotech companies must pass their products through the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

Engineered Food and the FDA
Engineered Food and the FDA
+ Enlarge
Leaders in the biotechnology industry need to be activists for their products.
To get bioengineered medicines, grains, vegetables, and animals on the market for human consumption, U.S. biotech companies must pass their products through the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

Recently, the FDA has been in the news because its Prescription Drug User Fee Act of 1992, which forces drug companies to pay in to expedite drug approval, came up for renewal. That same year, the FDA rejected mandatory labeling of genetically modified organism (GMO) products. How might the FDA affect the future of bioengineered food?

The User Fee Act has, in Harvard professor Jerry Avorn's opinion, "pretty much transformed the FDA. The sense now is we report to the industry; they pay our salaries; we had better be quick on these approvals."

Some biotech products will zoom through the FDA because they are advances in medical treatment, and, of course, we all want the sick to get the best new therapies. The problem is that the FDA is underfunded, so most resources are dedicated to medical advances. Thus, according to David Kessler of the FDA, "other parts of the agency—post-market surveillance, food safety, the field resources—those areas of the agency suffer."

In addition, the FDA is essentially rubber-stamping the tests performed by each company that has developed a product, and since they're bogged down in analysis of drug tests, they hardly ever follow up on the market to see if bioengineered products are having a negative impact on consumers. One publicized mishap in 2000 resulted in traces of StarLink Bt10 corn, meant only for industrial purposes, cross-pollinating with conventional corn and winding up in taco shells. We know the FDA isn't catching problems like this one--and that, as yet, consuming products deemed marginally unsafe won't cause an epidemic—but eventually the biotech industry may get consumer backlash for causing a serious problem that could have been avoided if the budget were expanded.

I should probably note that the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) oversaw the restrictions on this brand of corn, and the Department of Health and Human Services, of which the FDA is a part, only posts notices for products consumed by humans—so there's a further complication for biologically engineered products. They may be subject to these two departments as well as the Environmental Protection Agency, and this structural weakness probably doesn't make for excellent communication.


One could argue that GMO labeling is only a minor issue in the U.S. and that the average citizen isn't too concerned about the provenance of his or her food. There are at least two problems with this attitude. The first is that U.S. exports will be increasingly suspect to foreign markets, particularly the EU, which require labeling and stringent testing. The second is that any misstep, such as a genetically engineered product that results in widespread sickness, will create distrust of the FDA and bioengineering in general.

Europe's vigorous standards regarding approval, track-back, and isolation for GMO crops may be driving North America out of the market. Agricultural specialists like Dan McGuire are questioning if GMO crops are really to their economic advantage.

"I can't recall any foreign or domestic corn customer ever requesting that U.S. farmers start planting and supplying genetically engineered corn. So the introduction of GMOs was not a response to importers or consumers requesting such a change. Indeed, it's a direct result of biotech companies introducing those products into the domestic and foreign market without market research on consumer acceptance. Indeed, the first I heard about GMOs was from European importers," said McGuire.

Leaders in the biotechnology industry need to be activists for their products—labeling their products will bring them one step closer to informing the public and leading us into discussions of benefits like cheaper crop production and less pesticide runoff.

On the net:

FDA's Pay-for-Review System Up for Renewal
www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=9981627

European Legislative Framework for GMOs is Now in Place
europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?
reference=IP/03/1056&format=HTML&aged=0&language=EN&guiLanguage=en


GM Food: Europeans Still See More Risks than Benefits
www.gmo-compass.org/eng/news/stories/227.eurobarometer_europeans_biotechnology.html
Popular tags:

 FDA  industry  consumption  salary  United States  animals  Environmental Protection Agency  medicines  vegetables  North America
Rate this article:

      
Printable Version  printable version PDF Version  PDF version Email to a Friend  email to a friend Comment  add comments

Comments

article ID: 450001     http://www.biotechcrossing.com/article/450001/Engineered-Food-and-the-FDA/

article title: Engineered Food and the FDA
Comment not found for this article.
add comments add comments

Related articles


Facebook comments:


You're Brilliant, Extremely Logical, Rational and Have High Standards for Yourself

Top jobs are scattered on the websites of tens of thousands of companies, organizations and other job boards. This presents a difficult theoretical challenge that we help you overcome: By researching, structuring and logically ordering this tremendous variety of jobs in one place, we give you the ability to be resourceful and independently analyze your career options an efficient way.

Other job sites are inefficient because they only show you jobs that employers are paying to post there. We actually go out and research jobs and do not accept any money from advertisers for job postings so that we can provide you with unbiased research about every job opening. We give you the resources to analyze your career options in a reserved, calm, independent and analytical manner.
Tell us where to send your access instructions:

Your Email:     
total jobs
on EmploymentCrossing
3,498,334
new jobs this week
on EmploymentCrossing
627,000
Job Type Count
on BiotechCrossing
Clinical Jobs
2,035

Biotech Associate Jobs
891

Biotech Manager Jobs
422

Biotech Director Jobs
353

Biotech Coordinator Jobs
291

Biotech Specialist Jobs
236

Biotech Assistant Jobs
160
Get your risk FREE trial
jobs near you
International jobs
Work at home jobs
UK jobs
Canada jobs
New search feature using US map. click here

Looking for a new biotech job in your city? click here
most recent articles
Relationships, Inefficiency, and Your Career

One of the greatest obstacles for efficient businesses is the influence of relationships. In fact, relationships are sometimes so strong that they can ultimately end up crippling a business.

read more

biotech industry news:

recent articles:

top 5 job searches
today's featured job
Physical Therapist / Physical Therapy Assist.
United States-FL-Boca Raton

Currently looking for a Lic. Physical Therapist / Physical Therapy Assistant for a small but growing Physical Therapy Clinic. Part Time / PRN with ...

Click to Apply for - BiotechCrossing.com
post your resume
  • Make your resume viewable to thousands of employers.
  • Employers can look you up in our database.
  • Get job alerts based on your resume.
upload your resume

Free Report

The Five "Big Dirty Secrets" of Job Sites

Just enter your email to get the Report
The Five ''Big Dirty Secrets'' of Job Sites
I Love BiotechCrossing
Your privacy is guaranteed. We will never give out, lease, or sell your personal information.


Employment Research Institute

Privacy Policy by TRUSTe  VeriSign Secure Site
BiotechCrossing - #1 Job Aggregation and Private Job-Opening Research Service — The Most Quality Jobs Anywhere
BiotechCrossing is the first job consolidation service in the employment industry to seek to include every job that exists and not charge employers to post jobs on its site. BiotechCrossing uses sophisticated technology and manual work to comb employer websites and other job boards for jobs and bring them all to its site.

Copyright © 2011 BiotechCrossing - All rights reserved.