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- Marketing and Advertising Dietary Supplements - CHPA
Under the Dietary Supplements Health and Education Act (DSHEA), the manufacturer of a dietary supplement or dietary ingredient is responsible for ensuring that the product is safe before marketing
- Dietary Supplement Health Education Act (DSHEA)
DSHEA confirmed that dietary supplements must comply with current Good Manufacturing Practices (cGMPs) and also authorized FDA to establish separate GMPs for dietary supplements The supplement-specific GMP rules were released in June 2007 with a three-year “phase in” compliance period
- DIETARY SUPPLEMENTS: - Federal Trade Commission
Under DSHEA, all statements of nutritional support for dietary supplements must be accompanied by a two-part disclaimer on the product label: that the statement has not been evaluated by FDA and that the product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease
- The DSHEA Disconnect: What Doctors Don’t Know About Supplement . . .
Prior to 1994, dietary supplements were not an officially recognized category of products Vitamin companies were not permitted to make any sort of health claims about their products, and open advertising about them was more or less illegal
- Six Key Takeaways on Dietary Supplement Regulation, 30 Years Post-DSHEA . . .
Dietary supplement industry leaders and regulators gathered in Salt Lake City in June to examine the current status of the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994 (DSHEA), 30 years after that legal building block became law
- White Paper: Compliant Labeling of Dietary Supplements - ComplianceOnline
‘Dietary Supplement’ Regulations in the U S are based on DSHEA, the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994 The main centre concerned with or which has jurisdiction over dietary supplements is CFSAN, Centre for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition
- Past, present and future of DSHEA - Natural Products Insider
Most importantly, DSHEA established dietary supplements and their ingredients are not subject to food additive regulations This was a direct victory over the pre-DSHEA attempts by FDA to consider non-vitamin mineral ingredients as unapproved food additives
- FDA compliant supplement marketing - creativethirst. com
DSHEA Guidelines: The Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994 established the framework for supplement regulation in the US Compliance isn’t optional – it’s foundational to your marketing strategy
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