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SENATORS REACH AGREEMENT ON RESTRICTING SUPPLEMENTS !

HOWARD FENDRICH Associated Press

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closer thanks to an agreement among senators to include guidelines in a food

safety bill.

Four key areas of "common ground" are outlined in a letter sent by Sens.  John McCain, an Arizona Republican, and Byron Dorgan, a North Dakota  Democrat, to Sen. Tom Harkin, the Iowa Democrat who chairs the Senate  Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee.

McCain and Dorgan were co-sponsors of legislation introduced last month, the  Dietary Supplement Safety Act, aimed at regulating the industry. This week's  letter to Harkin - also sent to the committee's top Republican, Sen. Mike  Enzi of Wyoming, and Sen. Orrin Hatch, a Utah Republican - talks about  incorporating the "areas of agreement" into the FDA Food Safety  Modernization Bill.

Those provisions include:

_requiring all dietary supplement manufacturing, processing and holding  facilities to register with the Secretary of Health and Human Services;

_giving the Food and Drug Administration authority to issue a mandatory  recall order if a dietary supplement is adulterated or misbranded or "the  use of such supplement could cause serious adverse health consequences such  as death;"

_requiring the FDA commissioner to publish guidelines on new dietary  ingredients "as soon as possible;"

_mandating that the FDA notify the Drug Enforcement Administration when a  new product contains a synthetic anabolic steroid.

Athletes from various sports have blamed positive drug tests on substances  that turn up in dietary supplements even though they aren't listed as  ingredients on the label.

McCain has said his bill would protect professional and Olympic athletes -  along with casual sports participants who use supplements.

Pro sports leagues and the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency have been supporting  McCain's efforts on supplements, and USADA chief executive officer Travis  Tygart said Wednesday the letter indicates areas in which the new  legislative effort "fills holes."

"These are obviously needed improvements, and the agreement provides  additional consumer protections which are certainly important to all athletes and why the pro sports and the Olympic sports came together to push  for better regulation," Tygart said in a telephone interview with The  Associated Press. "It also continues to allow all consumers to have access  to legitimate supplements. It's a fair balance, and this step in the process  has resulted in a quick and beneficial agreement."

March11, 2010

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