Sunday, May 18, 2008

Health

USN Current Issue

Heparin Aftermath: FDA Told More Foreign Inspections Needed

Posted April 22, 2008

The safety of the U.S. drug supply came into question again this week amid allegations by the Food and Drug Administration that contaminated shipments of the blood thinner heparin have been linked to 81 deaths in the United States since January 2007 and many more injuries here and in 10 other countries.

The Chinese government and drug manufacturing firms placed the blame on processing facilities in the United States, but lawmakers called on the FDA to account for the lapses. FDA Commissioner Andrew von Eschenbach appeared before a congressional panel this morning to explain what his agency is doing to ensure the safety and security of the growing number of drugs produced overseas. Although FDA representatives yesterday assured the public that U.S. stocks of heparin now appear to be contaminant free, the lawmakers chastised the agency for not doing enough to thoroughly inspect imported drugs. Some of the legislators advocate an overhaul of the inspection system, including more inspections of overseas facilities.

Fraudulent, shoddy, and contaminated medications manufactured in developing countries have been recognized as a growing threat to worldwide pharmaceutical supplies. The heparin incident, however, may be the first documented case in which a contaminated, foreign-produced drug has actually killed Americans.

Reader Comments

Foreign Drugs

Funny, I recall the not too distant past when "neocons" raised he*ll over Canadian drugs being untested and untrustworthy. This was despite the fact that they are the same drug companies and plants that supply the US.

Fast forward four years and not only is our drug supply not being monitored by the current administration but our food supply is no longer to be trusted.

When I hear the ignorant touting how "we (the US) are the most powerful nation in the world" I want to throw up.

And conversation of the lost possibility of a BUSH wedding in the white house? Well they were at least smart enough to conclude that was not a good idea.

Illogical statement from above....

First of all, what do drugs and the title of "Most Powerful Nation" have anything to do with each other? Let alone someone else's wedding?!

If you have a problem with our food supply, either start growing your own...or maybe you should experience the extreme hunger of Africa, North Korea, etc., etc.. Our food supply is monitored far more scrupulously than any other nation in the world. And might I mention that nobody's perfect?!

Things are going to happen whether people inspect twice, three times, or more. Thats just the name of the game. Let's move on to more important things, like how much the Presidential Canidates have spent, or how to survive fuel costs!

And if your going to throw up, do it somewhere else other than on American soil. I am assuming that you have never experienced a patriotic feeling or pride in our country's history. Do you even know what the Constitution says, or what is written on the front of the Statue of Liberty?

Ignorant? Instead of sitting down typing about how the FDA screwed up, blah blah blah....get up and actually do something about it.

81 people died! How dare you use this article for your personal agenda against a Bush wedding or how you disagree on the greatness of the US.

Add your thoughts

Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our comment guidelines.

advertisement

advertisement

U.S. News Health Columnists

Dr. Bernadine Healy

On Health

Dr. Bernadine Healy is Health Editor for U.S.News & World Report.

Avery Comarow

Avery Comarow

Comarow On Quality

Avery Comarow on the efforts made by hospitals and other healthcare providers to improve patient care.

Nancy Shute

On Parenting

Nancy Shute explores the latest discoveries affecting children's health and parenting.

On Women

Deborah Kotz covers everything women care about when it comes to their health.

Katherine Hobson (Thomas Monaster for USN&WR)

On Fitness

Katherine Hobson writes about keeping your body fit and your diet healthy.

Staff writer Michelle Andrews (Jeffrey MacMillan for USN&WR)

On Health & Money

Michelle Andrews reports on how to be a smart health consumer.

Staff writer Adam Voiland

On Men's Health

Adam Voiland hopes to steer readers towards the best that medicine has to offer men.

advertisement

Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of our Terms and Conditions of Use and Privacy Policy.