Apr 16, 2013

City anchor: Many spurious ‘growth’ drugs being pumped into market: FDA

Days after Bombay High Court upheld the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) ban on the telecast of an advertisement endorsing a 'body growth formula powder', the FDA said there are many such deceptive products in the market that the public should be wary of. Officials said in the past year, the FDA has initiated action against around 10,000 such advertisements.
"Many of these products, the advertisements of which are telecast on TV at early hours, are spurious and are known to be not only useless but also have side effects. These include drugs promising height and weight growth, increase in libido and so on. However, as per the Drugs and Magic Remedies (objectionable advertisements) Act, 1954, manufacturers are not even supposed to advertise these products even if they are effective," said K B Shende, joint commissioner, FDA (Maharashtra).
Following an FDA directive to TV channels to stop advertisements of various products that promise height and stature growth, the manufacturers of a drug called 'Step Up Body Growth Formula', moved court challenging the directive. The HC, however, on Friday said the purpose of the Act was to prevent people from resorting to self medication.
In 2011-2012, the FDA had initiated action against 677 people across the state for flouting norms stipulated in the Food and Safety and Standard Act of India 2006, these included food grains, oil, milk and milk products, packaged food, drinks and tobacco products.
Shende said the number of complaints from the general public was less despite the prevalence of spurious drugs and products in the market.
"There has been a decline in the way such products are advertised over the past two years. However, people should be more forthcoming in their complaints. More importantly, people must be aware and not fall for the claims of these products. The FDA takes suo motu action against defaulting manufacturers as well as specific action from consumers as and when they come," he said.

எட்டயபுரம் பஸ் நிலையத்தில் உள்ள குளிர்பான கடையில் உணவு பாதுகாப்பு அதிகாரிகள் சோதனை நடத்தினர்

மாவட்டம் முழுவதும் காலாவதியான குளிர்பானங்கள் விற்பனை
எட்டயபுரம் பஸ் நிலையத்தில் உள்ள குளிர்பான கடையில் உணவு பாதுகாப்பு அதிகாரிகள் சோதனை நடத்தினர்.
எட்டயபுரம், ஏப். 16:தூத்துக்குடி
மாவட்டத்தில் மினரல் வாட்டர், குளிர்பானங்கள் விற்பனையில் நடக்கும் முறைகேடுகளை கண்டறிய உணவு பாதுகாப்பு அதிகாரிகள் சோதனை நடத்தி வருகின்றனர்.
தமிழகத்தில் கோடை காலம் துவங்கி விட்டதால் தெருக் களில் உள்ள சாதாரண பெட்டி கடைகள் முதல் நகரங்களில் உள்ள குளிர்பான கடைகள், பழக்கடை என எல்லா பகுதியிலும் மினரல் வாட்டர், குளிர்பானங்கள், பழச்சாறு விற்பனை ஜோராக நடக்கிறது.
சர்வதேச விளையாட்டு வீரர்கள் விளம்பரங்களில் தாகம் தணிப்பதை பார்த்து நொங்கு, பதனீர், மோர், நீச்சத்தண்ணீர், இளநீர் குடித்து தாகம் தணித்த கிராமத்து இளைஞர்கள் கூட இன்று பாட்டிலில் அடைக்கப்பட்ட குளிர்பானங்களை பருகுவதையே நாகரிகமாக கருதுவதால் குளிர்பானம், குடிநீர் பாட்டில் வியாபாரம் சூடு பிடித்துள்ளது.
இதனால், அதிக லாபம் பெறும் நோக்கோடு ஒரு சிலர் அங்கீகாரம் பெறாமல் தரமில்லாத குடிநீர் மற்றும் லேபிள் ஒட்டாத குளிர்பானங்களை தயார் செய்து விற்கின்றனர். மேலும், மக்கள் அதிகம் கூடும் பகுதியிலும், பஸ் நிலையம், ரயில் நிலையம், மதுபான பார்கள், சாலையோர கடைகள் போன்றவற்றில் காலாவதியான குடிநீர் மற்றும் குளிர்பானங்களை விற்பனை செய்கின்றனர்.
எனவே இதுபோன்ற விற்பனையை தவிர்க்கும் பொருட்டு தூத்துக்குடி கலெக்டர் ஆசிஷ்குமார் அனைத்து கடைகளிலும் சோதனை நடத்த உணவு பாதுகாப்பு அதிகாரிகளுக்கு உத்தரவிட்டுள்ளார்.
இது குறித்து மாவட்ட உணவு பாதுகாப்பு நியமன அலுவலர் டாக்டர் ஜெகதீஷ் சந்திரபோஸ் கூறியதாவது:
பெரும்பாலும் பொதுமக்கள் தாங்கள் வாங்கும் குளிர்பான பாட்டிலில் காலாவதி நாளை கவனிப்பதில்லை. தாகம் தணிந்தால் போதும் என்ற எண்ணத்தில் குடிநீர் பாக்கெட், பாட்டில்களில் தரச்சான்றிதழ் உள்ளதா என்றும் பார்ப்பதில்லை.
இதை பயன்படுத்தி, தரமில்லாத, காலாவதியான குளிர்பானங்களை மிக எளிதாக விற்பனை செய்து விடுகின்றனர். எனவே, பொதுமக்கள் குளிர்பானங்களை வாங்கும்போது விழிப்புடன் இருக்க வேண் டும். காலாவதியான தரமில்லாத குடிநீர், குளிர்பானங்களை பருகுவதால் வயிறு சம்பந்தமான நோய்கள் உருவாகும்.
எனவே, இவற்றை அடியோடு ஒழிக்கும் பொருட்டு கலெக்டர் உத்தரவின் பேரில் எனது தலைமையில் வட்டார உணவு பாதுகாப்பு அலுவலர்கள் கோவில்பட்டி மாரிச்சாமி, கயத்தார் பொன்ராஜ், ஓட்டப்பிடாரம் நீதிமோகன் பால்ராஜ், புதூர் சிவபாலன் ஆகியோர் மாவட்டம் முழுவதும் சோதனை நடத்தி வருகின்றனர்.

“We are migrating towards online licensing and regn”

Food & Drug Administration (FDA), Maharashtra, is the number one in licensing and registration of food business operators (FBOs) under the FSS (Licensing & Registration) Regulations, 2011, among all the states in the country. Mahesh Zagade, food safety commissioner, FDA, Maharashtra, delves into the details in a quick conversation with Abhitash Singh. Excerpts:

Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Maharashtra is said to be facing manpower problem. What steps are being taken to sort out this problem?
First of all, there is no manpower problem. It is continuous ‘upgradation’ to face the emerging challenges. But we are managing with the existing ones very efficiently. And if we get more manpower it will be beneficial for us.

The deadline for licensing and registration for FBOs has been extended by FSSAI. What various initiatives will be taken by Maharashtra FDA to complete the procedure on time?
Even as the deadline for licensing and registration is extended, we are continuing with the process at a rapid pace. We are the number one in the country in licensing and registration and continue to maintain the slot. We will not be waiting till last date for the deadline. In order to complete the procedure before February 4, 2014, we are also migrating towards online licensing and registration.

Tell us about the separate budget for FDA, which is being talked about.
It’s already there in place.

What steps should be taken in order to provide safe food to the people of Maharashtra?
Implement the Food Safety & Standards Act, 2006, strictly in the state. We need to enforce and implement it in letter and spirit.

What steps should the food industry in the state take to improve the quality of food?
In order to improve the quality of food, the food industry should indicate contents, ingredients, products’ nutrition value, manufacturing date, best before, MRP and follow Schedule (4) of the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006.

Even Maharashtra has banned gutkha in the state under the FSS Act. However, some people are still involved in illegally selling it. What steps is the FDA taking against them?
We are filing the First Information Report (FIR) against them. We are the only state in the country to destroy gutkha worth Rs 14 crore, even if it is banned in 17 other states.

Check its licence before feasting at a roadside stall

Street food vendors selling chole kulche and paranthas, road-side eateries, restaurants, hotels, food processing units, etc., will now have to either obtain a food safety licence or register themselves with a government agency failing which they will be fined.
The Delhi government has finalised a government agency, which will oversee the process of granting licences and registering the vendors under the Food Safety and Standard Act 2006. The matter will get a final nod in a cabinet meeting to be held next week.
Health minister AK Walia on Monday held a review meeting wherein it was decided that the entire process of granting licences and registering the vendors will start within two months. Food safety licence is in addition to all existing licensing requirements from different government agencies.
“We have shortlisted a government agency that will be in charge of the entire process. We are hoping to start it soon. A place has been identified for its office. But we will first take an approval from the cabinet,” said Walia.
“The Act is supposed to ensure street food vendors observe better hygiene standards,” added Walia.
According to officials, those who fail to get a licence will have to either close down their business or shell out heavy penalties ranging from Rs. 25,000 to Rs. 10 lakh if they continue without licence or registration.
Officials said that the state government has already missed the last deadline for registering and issuing licences to street vendors. The deadline has been revised to February 2014 by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India, which was set up in 2008, after the Food Safety and Standards Act was passed in 2006. It became active only after regulations of the Act were notified in 2011.
 Food businesses with an annual turnover of below Rs. 12 lakh will have to get registered while those with a turnover of Rs. 12 lakh and more will have to obtain a licence. As per the regulations, fee for a year’s registration is Rs. 100, while that for licences range from Rs. 2,000 to Rs.7,500.
The National Association of Street Vendors of India (NASVI) welcomed the move, stating that at least this will give some sort of identity to the vendors. “We have started a survey to identify street food vendors along with the Food and Safety Department in an attempt to register them,” said a spokesperson.

Registration or licence must for food sellers soon

NEW DELHI: To enhance accountability for those in food business, Delhi government is all set to make it mandatory for them to seek registration, procure a licence from the department or face penalty.

According to the proposed policy, any food vendor, inclusive of roadside eateries, restaurants, hotels and food processors, with a turnover of up to Rs 12 lakh a year has to register themselves with the government. Those with larger turnover will have to obtain licence from the government.

A one-year registration will cost vendors Rs100. The licence, however, is expected to range from Rs 2,000 to Rs 7,500. The government said that the act aimed at ensuring that street food vendors observe better standards of hygiene.

Once the policy is notified, anyone found defaulting will have to either close down the business or shell out heavy penalties ranging from Rs 25,000 to Rs 10 lakh depending upon the gravity of the offence.

Sources said that Delhi government premium body DSIIDC will oversee the process of granting licence and registering the vendors under the Food Safety and Standard Act 2006. The proposed policy is expected to placed before the Delhi cabinet in the coming week.

The decision to go ahead with the plan was taken in a review meeting headed by health minister AK Walia on Monday. Sources said that the process of granting licence and registering the vendors will start within two months' time. Food safety licence is in addition to all existing licensing requirements from different government agencies.

"We have short-listed a government agency which will be in charge of the entire process. We are hoping to start it soon. A place has also been identified where the office will be set for the agency but we will first take an approval from the cabinet," Walia told TOI.

Government sources said that the state government has already missed the last deadline of registering and issuing licences to the street vendors. The deadline has been revised to February 2014 by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India which was set up in 2008.