F.D.A. May Tap Experts on Energy Drinks |
SEOOKE.com: The Food and Drug Administration said in a letter released on Tuesday that it was likely to seek advice from outside experts to help determine whether energy drinks posed particular risks to teenagers or people with underlying health problems.
The letter appears to signal a change in the agency’s
approach to the drinks, which contain high levels of caffeine.
Previously, F.D.A. officials have said that they were
investigating possible risks posed by popular products like 5-Hour Energy,
Monster Energy and Red Bull. The F.D.A. letter, which was released Tuesday by
Senator Richard J. Durbin of Illinois and
Senator Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut,
follows disclosures that the agency received reports of 18 deaths and over 150
injuries that mentioned the possible involvement of energy drinks.
Energy drink makers have said their products are safe
and were not responsible for the health problems.
Industry analysts said the letter indicated that the
F.D.A. did not plan any immediate actions on energy drinks, an interpretation
that set off a rally on Tuesday in the stock of Monster Beverage, the producer
of Monster Energy. Company shares closed at $51.97, up over 13 percent. Any
regulatory outcome is likely to be “benign,” Judy Hong, an analyst at Goldman
Sachs, said in a note to investors, according to Bloomberg News.
In Canada,
however, the use of an outside panel led to limits on caffeine levels in energy
drinks.
In their letter, F.D.A. officials indicated that an
outside review would focus on the possible risks posed by high levels of
caffeine, a stimulant, to certain groups. They reiterated that daily
consumption of significant levels of caffeine, which is found in products like
coffee and tea, is safe.
“Areas of particular focus would include such matters
as the vulnerability of certain populations to stimulants and the incidence and
consequence of excessive consumption” of energy drinks, especially by young
people, F.D.A. officials wrote.
In Canada,
an expert panel made several recommendations, including arguing that such
beverages be labeled “stimulant drug-containing drinks.”
Health Canada, that country’s counterpart to the
F.D.A., did not adopt many of the group’s recommendations, but it has put in
place new rules limiting caffeine levels in cans of energy drinks to 180
milligrams.
Some larger-size cans of energy drinks sold in the United States,
like the 24-ounce can of Monster Energy and the 20-ounce can of Red Bull, have
caffeine levels above that limit.
The agency also said that a survey suggested that
energy drinks constitute a small portion of the caffeine consumed in this
country, even by teenagers.[NYT]
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