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These cookies are essential to provide you with services available through our website and to enable you to use certain features of our website. Without these cookies, we cannot provide you certain services on our website; as a result these cookies do not require your consent.
These cookies are used to show advertising that is likely to be of interest to you based on your browsing habits. These cookies, as served by our content and/or advertising providers, may combine information they collected from our website with other information they have independently collected relating to your web browser's activities across their network of websites.
These cookies are used to provide you with a more personalized experience on our website and to remember choices you make when you use our website. For example, we may use functionality cookies to remember your language preferences or remember your login details.
These cookies are used to collect information to analyze the traffic to our website and how visitors are using our website. For example, these cookies may track things such as how long you spend on the website or the pages you visit which helps us to understand how we can improve our website site for you.
Foreign Sourced Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients vs. Imported Drugs
In a 60 Minutes segment airing tonight, Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Commissioner Margaret Hamburg admits that there are rare instances of counterfeit medicines seeping into the closed U.S drug supply...
In a 60 Minutes segment airing tonight, Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Commissioner Margaret Hamburg admits that there are rare instances of counterfeit medicines seeping into the closed U.S drug supply but in other countries around the world, patients aren't as lucky nor are they safe from the global counterfeit drug threat.
The Commissioner also talked about active pharmaceutical ingredients, which are critical components that give a prescription drug its therapeutic effect, and therefore helps to cure, mitigate, treat or prevent disease.
Watch Kendra Martello, Assistant General Counsel, PhRMA, explaining the difference between foreign-sourced active pharmaceutical ingredients in FDA-approved medicines and imported drugs from foreign countries that have not been approved by FDA.
Kendra stressed that while a prescription drug may contain an active pharmaceutical ingredient sourced from other locations in the world, it is important to know that FDA's strict regulations apply to all aspects of the drug's manufacture, including the use of all ingredients, both active and inactive, that make up an FDA-approved medicine sold in the U.S., no matter where the ingredients are derived from.
Prescription drugs sold in other countries, however, are very different because they are not FDA-approved and not necessarily safe for consumption by U.S. patients.
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