FDA Chief: Don't Regulate Tobacco
Posted on: Tuesday, 6 March 2007, 12:01 CST
By ANDREW BRIDGES
WASHINGTON - Government regulation of tobacco could backfire by inadvertently forcing smokers to light up more and inhale more deeply, the head of the Food and Drug Administration said Tuesday.
In an interview with The Associated Press, Dr. Andrew von Eschenbach said that if the FDA reduced nicotine levels in cigarettes, people would tailor their smoking habits to maintain current levels of the addictive drug.
"We could find ourselves in the conundrum of having made a decision about nicotine only to have made the public health radically worse. And that is not the position FDA is in; we approve products that enhance health, not destroy it," said von Eschenbach, a cancer surgeon.
A bipartisan group of lawmakers introduced legislation last month that would give the FDA the authority to regulate tobacco, in part by reducing its nicotine content.
Smoking kills more than 400,000 Americans a year.
Von Eschenbach said repeatedly that the issue of regulating tobacco is a complex one.
"What I don't want to see happen is that we are in a position where we are determining that a cigarette is safe," von Eschenbach said.
In 1996, the FDA moved to regulate tobacco. The Supreme Court ruled in 2000 that Congress had not authorized the agency to do so.
Source: Associated Press/AP Online
Related Articles
- Lung Cancer Alliance Issues Statement on FDA Tobacco Regulation Bill
- House Panel Backs FDA Tobacco Regulation
- Statement From Lorillard Tobacco on FDA-Tobacco Regulation Legislation
- Poll: Most Back FDA Tobacco Regulation
- Experts: FDA Tobacco Bill Long Overdue
- 22nd Century Proposes Nicotine-Free Cigarettes Be Considered in FDA Tobacco Regulation Bill
- Bush picks von Eschenbach as FDA chief
- Bush picks von Eschenbach as FDA chief: W.House
- Bush seen picking von Eschenbach as FDA chief
- Bush expected to pick von Eschenbach as FDA chief
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds