Steven’s Traditional Thanksgiving Message to the FDA Stakeholder Community
Time to Give Thanks to FDA — Once Again
Nov 19, 2021 (Updated November 21, 2024)
Next week, many of us will be sitting down to a Thanksgiving dinner and talking about the parts of our lives for which we are grateful. Consider adding thanks to FDA and its devoted staff, and special thanks to the field inspectors who never get sufficient credit for the difficulty and potential danger in their worldwide review of farms, food processing plants, and raw ingredient and medical manufacturing facilities.
Altogether, the agency has more than 18,000 diligent and dedicated employees, each playing a vital role in assuring safe foods and safe and effective medical products. Yet, we are insufficiently thankful for the public benefits derived from an effective FDA. First among those benefits is the confidence each of us has when we sit down for a meal or use a drug or medical device.
Around the Thanksgiving table, we can see the positive role of the agency in our everyday lives. The biggest item on the table — the turkey — is regulated by USDA (you knew that), but consider who has oversight over the feed to make the turkey grow (FDA), any drugs, if needed, to help keep it healthy (FDA), the stuffing to go in it (FDA), and the gravy to go on it (FDA).
Plus safe food handling processes and directions are on the FDA website. (Check it out!) Other items likely to be on the table are regulated at some point by FDA: the sweet potatoes, the string beans, the cranberries, and the pumpkin pie.
Sharing the Thanksgiving table is our family and friends, many of whom can lead productive and caring lives because FDA-approved medical products play a role in extending their healthy lives. I think about my grandfather, who died at 60 from a stroke before I could enjoy a Thanksgiving dinner with him. The FDA-approved medicines we have today would certainly have prevented the stroke. If a stroke occurred, he would have been diagnosed and treated more rapidly at the emergency room with FDA-approved tests, imaging equipment, and therapies. All of those were unavailable several decades ago.
His daughter — my mother — who would have celebrated her 98th birthday in 2020, is not at the head of the table. It took a lot of FDA-approved medicines (innovator, generic, OTC, and supplements) and a number of FDA-approved devices and equipment for her to have lived more than 50% longer than her father.
There are yet other parts of FDA’s activities for which we should be thankful. For example, in every household, there are cosmetics and personal care products which need to be safe for everyday use. Also, 67% of American households have pets, whose food and drugs are primarily FDA’s responsibility. Less well-known, FDA sets standards for radiation emissions from electronic products. In addition to diagnostic imaging machines and therapeutic lasers, this also covers cell phones, microwave ovens, computer monitors, televisions, and the screening machines used by Homeland Security at airports.
Altogether, FDA regulates products that represent about 20% of annual consumer spending in the United States (more than $2.6 trillion). It is largely because of FDA that we can rely on those products to perform satisfactorily for their intended use. That gives us much for which we should be thankful.
Editorial Note:
This week's second column was written by Steven Grossman, Executive Director of the Alliance for a Stronger FDA.