Officials at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration say they want to
hear from people if they think a tobacco product is defective or causes a
health issue.
The Department of Health and Human Services' Safety Reporting Portal was
revised to add a new category for tobacco products. It provides a
standardized way for consumers and healthcare professionals to let the
FDA know when they suspect that there is an unexpected health or safety
issue with a specific tobacco product, officials said.Classic Silver
Dr. Ii-Lun Chen, medical branch chief in the Office of Science at FDA's
Center for Tobacco Products, said a new online tool can help report a
problem.
Until now, consumers reported problems with tobacco products to FDA via
MedWatch, the FDA Safety Information and Adverse Event Reporting
Program, a system that does not ask questions specific to tobacco
products.
"There is no known safe tobacco product, but FDA can play a role in
helping prevent certain unexpected health consequences from tobacco
products, such as those that occur from defective tobacco products, or
health or safety problems beyond those normally associated with tobacco
product use," Chen said in a statement.
The FDA is interested in reports from consumers about tobacco products
that are damaged, defective or contaminated, such as cigarettes
containing mold. It could also be that a tobacco product just smells or
tastes wrong Chen said.
FDA also wants to know if tobacco product users have experienced an
unexpected health or other safety problem that they believe has been
caused by use of a particular tobacco product. These could include
reports of fire caused by tobacco product use, burns or other injuries,
accidental or unintended exposure of children, allergic reactions,
poisonings and other toxicities, or an unusual reaction in a longtime
user.
No comments:
Post a Comment