93-31815. Food Labeling; General Requirements for Health Claims for Dietary Supplements  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 2 (Tuesday, January 4, 1994)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 395-426]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 93-31815]
    
    
    [[Page Unknown]]
    
    [Federal Register: January 4, 1994]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
    21 CFR Parts 20 and 101
    
    [Docket No. 85N-061D]
    RIN 0905-AB67
    
     
    
    Food Labeling; General Requirements for Health Claims for Dietary 
    Supplements
    
    AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is amending its food 
    labeling regulations to make dietary supplements of vitamins, minerals, 
    herbs, or other similar nutritional substances (dietary supplements) 
    subject to the same general requirements that apply to all other types 
    of food with respect to the use of health claims that characterize the 
    relationship of a substance to a disease or health-related condition on 
    the label or in labeling and the content of petitions for obtaining 
    authorization for such health claims. This action is being taken in 
    response to provisions of the Nutrition Labeling and Education Act of 
    1990 (the 1990 amendments) and the Dietary Supplement Act of 1992 (the 
    DS act) that bear on health claims.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: July 5, 1994.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: James R. Taylor, Jr., Center for Food 
    Safety and Applied Nutrition (HFS-158), Food and Drug Administration, 
    200 C St. SW., Washington, DC 20204, 202-205-5229.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
    
        On November 8, 1990, President Bush signed into law the 1990 
    amendments (Pub. L. 101-535). This new law amended the Federal Food, 
    Drug, and Cosmetic Act (the act) in a number of important ways. One of 
    the notable aspects of the 1990 amendments is their confirmation of 
    FDA's authority to regulate health claims on food labels and in food 
    labeling. The new provisions amended the act by adding a provision, 
    section 403(r)(1)(B) (21 U.S.C. 343(r)(1)(B)), that provides that a 
    product is misbranded if it bears a claim that characterizes the 
    relationship of a nutrient to a disease or health-related condition, 
    unless the claim is made in accordance with sections 403(r)(3) of the 
    act (which pertains to foods in conventional food form) or 403(r)(5)(D) 
    (which pertains to dietary supplements).
        Congress enacted the health claims provisions of the 1990 
    amendments to help U.S. consumers maintain healthy dietary practices 
    and to protect these consumers from unfounded health claims. The House 
    Report of June 13, 1990, states, ``Health claims supported by 
    significant scientific agreement can reinforce the Surgeon General's 
    recommendations and help Americans to maintain a balanced and healthful 
    diet'' (Ref. 1). In addition, the statement of the House Floor Managers 
    noted that ``There is a great potential for defrauding consumers if 
    food is sold that contains inaccurate or unsupportable health claims'' 
    (Ref. 2). The House Report characterized the need for regulation of 
    health claims as ``compelling'' (Ref. 1).
        FDA's first step to effect the health claims provisions of the 1990 
    amendments appeared in the form of a November 27, 1991, proposed health 
    claims regulation (56 FR 60537) (hereinafter referred to as ``the 
    health claims proposal''). That document proposed to establish general 
    requirements pertaining to the use of health claims that characterize 
    the relationship of a food component to a disease or health-related 
    condition on the labels and in labeling of both foods in conventional 
    food form and dietary supplements. The health claims proposal contained 
    definitions to clarify the meaning of specific terms used in the 
    regulations, preliminary requirements that a component of food must 
    meet to be eligible to be the subject of a health claim, a scientific 
    standard for assessing the validity of claims, general labeling 
    requirements for health claims that are permitted by regulation, and 
    prohibitions on certain types of health claims. Also, the health claims 
    proposal contained provisions pertaining to the required content of 
    petitions for health claims.
        In response to the health claims proposal, FDA received over 6,000 
    letters, each containing one or more comments, from consumers, health 
    care professionals, universities, State and local governments, foreign 
    governments, trade organizations, consumer advocacy organizations, 
    research institutes, industry, and professional organizations. Many of 
    the comments pertained to dietary supplements. The agency summarized 
    and addressed the issues raised in the comments in the final rule on 
    health claims that published in the Federal Register of January 6, 1993 
    (58 FR 2478) (hereinafter referred to as ``the health claims final 
    rule''). The health claims final rule became effective on May 8, 1993.
        Although the health claims proposal pertained to dietary 
    supplements as well as foods in conventional food form, the final rule 
    applied only to the latter type of foods. In October of 1992, Congress 
    passed the DS act (Pub. L. 102-571), which imposed a moratorium on FDA 
    implementation of the 1990 amendments with respect to dietary 
    supplements until December 15, 1993. The DS act provides that by June 
    15, 1993, FDA was to have issued proposed rules to implement the 1990 
    amendments with respect to dietary supplements, and that by December 
    31, 1993, the agency is to issue final rules based on these proposals. 
    The DS act also amends the 1990 amendments to reflect the fact that if 
    the agency does not issue final rules with respect to health claims for 
    dietary supplements by December 31, 1993, the proposed regulations are 
    to be considered final regulations at that time.
        In the Federal Register of June 18, 1993 (58 FR 33700), FDA 
    responded to the DS act by issuing a proposal that sets forth a 
    standard and procedure for making health claims for dietary supplements 
    (hereinafter referred to as ``the dietary supplement health claims 
    proposal''). In that proposal, FDA proposed to make health claims on 
    dietary supplements subject to the same general requirements that apply 
    to health claims on all other types of food.
        In response to the dietary supplement health claims proposal, FDA 
    received over 1,200 letters, each containing one or more comments, from 
    consumers, health care professionals, universities, State and local 
    governments, trade organizations, consumer advocacy organizations, 
    research institutes, industry, and professional organizations. Some 
    comments agreed with one or more provisions of the proposed rule 
    without providing further grounds for support other than those provided 
    by FDA in the preamble to the proposal. Other comments disagreed with 
    one or more provisions of the proposal without providing specific 
    grounds for their disagreement. Many comments addressed issues that are 
    beyond the scope of these regulations and will not be addressed in this 
    document. For example, some responded to various aspects of FDA's June 
    18, 1993, advance notice of proposed rulemaking concerning the general 
    regulation of dietary supplements (58 FR 33690). Most of the comments, 
    however, addressed the proposed regulations and provided specific 
    grounds in support of their positions. The agency has summarized and 
    addressed the issues raised in the comments in the discussion that 
    follows.
    
    II. Regulatory Approach
    
    A. General Approach Based on FDA's Review of the 1990 Amendments
    
        The 1990 amendments did not provide a specific standard for when a 
    health claim should be authorized on dietary supplements or a specific 
    procedure for authorizing such claims. Under section 403(r)(5)(D) of 
    the act, the establishment of such a standard and such a procedure is 
    left to the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human 
    Services (DHHS) (and, by delegation, FDA). Thus, in the dietary 
    supplement health claims proposal (58 FR 33700 at 33702), FDA reviewed 
    the legislative history of the 1990 amendments to identify the features 
    that Congress intended would guide the agency's choice of a scientific 
    standard and procedure for regulating health claims on dietary 
    supplements. FDA identified the following features that it believes 
    should guide its choice:
        o The regulations are to deal only with the procedure and 
    standard for health claims for the substances in dietary 
    supplements. They are to have no bearing on the availability of any 
    dietary supplements.
        o The regulations must prohibit the use of health claims that 
    are not authorized under their provisions.
        o The regulations must ensure that any health claims that appear 
    in labeling are scientifically valid.
        o The regulations must ensure that any health claims that appear 
    in labeling are understandable.
        o The regulations should be such that all segments of the food 
    industry are treated fairly and in a consistent manner, unless there 
    is an appropriate basis on which to draw a distinction. This factor 
    embodies a principle of equity implicitly in the act.
    
    (58 FR 33700 at 33703)
    
        With these features in mind, FDA considered all of the approaches 
    of which it was aware that might be used to regulate dietary 
    supplements. The agency tentatively concluded that it should adopt an 
    approach that would subject dietary supplements to the same standard 
    that applies to foods in conventional food form. FDA stated that it was 
    its tentative view that that approach strikes the appropriate balance 
    between the congressional concern for consumer fraud, public health, 
    and sound science, on the one hand, and the desire to provide the 
    consumer with information on the other. Furthermore, the agency advised 
    that if it adopts this standard for dietary supplements, all foods will 
    be regulated under the same standard.
        FDA pointed out that under the same procedure that applies with 
    respect to claims for substances in food in conventional food form, 
    there is a premarket review that ensures that the safety of the 
    substance that is to be the subject of the claim has been established 
    as well as the scientific validity of the claim. A claim linking a 
    substance to a disease, whether on a food in conventional food form or 
    on a dietary supplement, is intended to increase intake of that 
    substance. Thus, the agency said, it is important to ensure that a 
    claim encouraging such increased intake can be safely implemented. 
    Therefore, FDA proposed to adopt the same procedure for health claims 
    for dietary supplements as for foods in conventional food form.
    1. Availability of Dietary Supplements
        1. A great many comments, primarily from consumers, raised 
    objections that indicated that the commenters were misinformed about 
    the proposed regulations, or that they simply did not believe what FDA 
    stated in the dietary supplement proposal. Many of the comments 
    expressed considerable anger, resentment, and even fear over the 
    proposal. A large number of these comments characterized the proposal 
    as an attack against the dietary supplement industry. Many of these 
    comments stated that FDA is plotting to ban all dietary supplements. A 
    number of comments explained that the proposed regulations would limit 
    the number of dietary supplements available to consumers by limiting 
    the amount of health information that could appear on supplement labels 
    and thus diminish supplements' marketability. The comments maintained 
    that FDA's proposed policy of requiring premarket review of a 
    supplement's safety is contrary to the agency's stated intent to 
    preserve supplement availability and consumer choice. Some of the 
    comments maintained that many manufacturers would be put out of 
    business. Many of the comments argued that the nation's health would be 
    adversely affected, and that health care costs would increase without 
    dietary supplements to maintain good health. Some comments contained 
    testimonials that certain dietary supplements were responsible for 
    curing and preventing a variety of diseases, including cancer.
        However, a few comments pointed out that assertions that FDA plans 
    to ban dietary supplements are unfounded. A number of these comments 
    predicted that the vast majority of dietary supplements will remain in 
    the marketplace because about 80 percent of supplement labels are 
    already in compliance with the proposed provisions.
        There is no basis for virtually all of the concerns raised in the 
    comments about the availability of dietary supplements. Nothing in 
    these regulations will make them unavailable to consumers. These 
    regulations focus only on ensuring that health claims, if made on the 
    labels or in the labeling of dietary supplements, are scientifically 
    valid and understandable. Thus, the availability of dietary supplements 
    will not be affected by these regulations. While it is likely that some 
    claims may have to be removed from product labeling as a result of this 
    final rule, the products themselves can continue to be marketed.
        It is true that prohibiting the use of claims that have not been 
    authorized by FDA may have an adverse impact on the marketability of 
    some products. However, any such impact is outweighed by the need to 
    assure consumers that the claims that are made in labeling are 
    scientifically valid, and that they can rely on such claims. In fact, 
    the only products whose marketability will ultimately suffer under 
    these regulations will be those whose labeling has borne claims that 
    cannot be supported by the available scientific evidence.
        The requirement that the agency be confident that the presence of a 
    health claim will not result in unsafe intakes of the substance that is 
    the subject of the claim is not inconsistent with supplement 
    availability and consumer choice. If a manufacturer does not choose to 
    make a claim about a substance, nothing in these regulations will 
    affect the manufacturer's ability to continue to market supplements 
    that contain that substance. FDA believes, however, that it has an 
    obligation to ensure that before it authorizes a claim that encourages 
    consumers to increase their consumption of a substance, it have some 
    assurance that increased consumption of that substance will not be 
    harmful.
    2. Fair and Consistent Treatment of All Segments of the Food Industry
        2. Many comments asserted that FDA has not been evenhanded in its 
    approval of health claims for use on dietary supplements and on foods 
    in conventional food form. Some of these comments maintained that FDA's 
    unfair treatment of dietary supplements is evidenced by the agency's 
    approval of health claims involving cancer and coronary heart disease 
    for use on fruits, vegetables, and grain products but not for use on 
    fortified foods or supplements that provide fiber or antioxidant 
    vitamins. The comments stated that FDA should authorize health claims 
    involving particular nutrients for use on any food that contains those 
    nutrients, including dietary supplements, unless there is significant 
    scientific agreement that the claim is valid only when the nutrient is 
    consumed in a particular form. To ensure that such an approach is taken 
    in evaluating health claims for use on dietary supplements in the 
    future, a few comments requested that FDA add the following provision 
    to the end of Sec. 101.14(g) (21 CFR 101.14(g)):
        A health claim that has been approved for any substance that is 
    to be consumed at other than decreased dietary levels shall be 
    permitted on all foods (including dietary supplements) containing 
    the requisite amounts of that substance, unless FDA determines that 
    (i) there is significant scientific agreement (as defined in 
    subparagraph (c)) that the consumption of the substance in the 
    particular food will not provide the benefits claimed, or (ii) the 
    food contains disqualifying amounts of another substance.
        A few comments contended that FDA also has treated dietary 
    supplements unfairly by withholding approval of a health claim 
    concerning the role of folic acid in reducing the risk of neural tube 
    defects (NTD's) simply because of its concerns that allowing the claim 
    on foods in conventional food form would raise safety issues because of 
    overfortification of the food supply and the subsequent effect on 
    certain subpopulations. These comments asserted that the proper course 
    of action for the agency would have been to allow health claims on 
    dietary supplements but to prohibit their use on foods in conventional 
    food form until the public health concerns associated with such use had 
    been resolved.
        However, a few comments supported FDA's decision to approve 
    particular health claims for use on fruits, vegetables, and fiber-
    containing grains while not authorizing their use on dietary 
    supplements or fortified foods with added antioxidant vitamins or 
    fiber. These comments noted that there are many compounds in fruits and 
    vegetables that may be involved in reducing the risk of disease that 
    may not have been identified. The comments asserted that before 
    allowing a dietary supplement to bear a health claim authorized for use 
    on food in conventional food form, it is important to establish that 
    the supplement provides the same health protection benefits as the 
    conventional food.
        FDA disagrees with the assertions in the comments that it has been 
    unfair with the dietary supplement industry with respect to its 
    approval of specific health claims. FDA believes that the health claims 
    should be consistent with the scientific evidence available to the 
    agency. In the Federal Register of January 6, 1993 (58 FR 2537, 2552, 
    and 2622), FDA explained why it was authorizing health claims 
    pertaining to: (1) Heart disease and diets low in saturated fat and 
    cholesterol and high in fruits, vegetables, and grain products that 
    contain fiber; (2) cancer and diets low in fat and high in fruits, 
    vegetables, and grain products that contain fiber; and (3) cancer and 
    diets low in fat and high in fruits and vegetables that may contain 
    fiber, vitamin A (beta-carotene) and vitamin C. The agency also 
    explained in detail why it was not authorizing health claims pertaining 
    to any specific nutrients (i.e., heart disease and dietary fiber, 
    cancer and dietary fiber, and cancer and antioxidant vitamins).
        In the case of the antioxidant vitamins, FDA found that although 
    there was sufficient evidence to justify a health claim concerning the 
    relationship between diets low in fat and high in fruits and vegetables 
    that may contain fiber, vitamin A, and vitamin C and a reduced risk of 
    cancer, the available evidence did not provide a basis on which to 
    attribute the reduction in risk of disease to any individual vitamin or 
    combination of vitamins, regardless of whether the vitamin is 
    classified as an antioxidant or not (see discussion under section IV., 
    58 FR 2622 at 2633). Yet, because of the usefulness of vitamins A (as 
    beta-carotene) and C and dietary fiber in identifying those fruits and 
    vegetables that correlate with reduced cancer risk, FDA identified 
    these nutrients as being characteristic of the foods associated with a 
    protective effect. Any one or a combination of these three nutrients 
    can serve as the identifying marker. Moreover, because fruits and 
    vegetables are also characterized by an absence of fat, and because of 
    the identified relationship of low fat diets to reduced risk of cancer, 
    FDA highlighted low fat intakes as part of the dietary pattern 
    associated with decreased cancer risk. Because the mechanism of the 
    protective effect of fruits and vegetables is not known, and because it 
    is not possible to determine which of the nutrients or other components 
    in fruits and vegetables is causing the observed effect, the health 
    claim authorized by FDA focuses on fruits and vegetables as a class of 
    foods and their relationship to cancer risk, and not on particular 
    nutrients. By requiring that all characterizing nutrients be identified 
    as characteristic of dietary patterns rich in fruits and vegetables 
    without specifically attributing reduced cancer risk to a single 
    nutrient or single type of nutrient (antioxidant vitamins), FDA made 
    the claim consistent with the scientific knowledge available to it at 
    the time it authorized the claim.
        Because of the rapidly evolving science base relative to this 
    topic, however, FDA has continued to update its evaluation of the 
    scientific evidence and the degree of scientific agreement on the 
    relationship between antioxidant vitamins and cancer. As part of these 
    efforts, FDA initiated, along with other major research and health 
    organizations as cosponsors, a public conference on antioxidant 
    vitamins and cancer and cardiovascular disease that was held on 
    November 1 through 3, 1993. The transcript of that meeting has been 
    submitted to the Docket as a comment on the antioxidant vitamins and 
    cancer rulemaking, along with other comments received in response to 
    the announcement of the conference (58 FR 54595, October 22, 1993). FDA 
    is reviewing the results of this conference and other scientific 
    evidence that has become publicly available since the publication of 
    the January 6, 1993, final rule on antioxidant vitamins and cancer.
        Similarly, in the case of heart disease and dietary fiber and of 
    cancer and dietary fiber, the agency found that there was insufficient 
    evidence to attribute the reduction in risk specifically to dietary 
    fiber or to specific fiber components. The agency did conclude, 
    however, that dietary fiber and soluble fiber, along with other 
    nutrients, serve as useful markers in identifying those foods for which 
    the scientific evidence showed that inclusion in a daily diet was 
    associated with reduced risk of cancer and of heart disease (58 FR 2552 
    and 58 FR 2537).
        For both topic areas, the agency also noted the inability of 
    commonly used analytical methodologies to detect many of the 
    characteristics that vary among dietary fibers and that may be related 
    to biological function (e.g., particle size, chemical composition, 
    water-holding capacity). With regard to heart disease, other components 
    variable associated with soluble fiber in foods (e.g., lipid 
    components) may also contribute to a cholesterol-lowering effect. FDA 
    found that the inability to detect many of the differences among 
    fibers, fiber components, and other substances in foods that contain 
    dietary fibers, including soluble fiber, and the general lack of 
    conclusions as to the mechanism of action of dietary fibers and fiber 
    components were limiting factors on FDA's ability to draw conclusions 
    from the available evidence. Furthermore, FDA noted that foods high in 
    dietary fiber are also generally low in calories and total fat, factors 
    that are associated with reduced risk of cancer. Fiber-rich foods are 
    also generally low in saturated fats and cholesterol, substances that 
    also affect the risk of developing heart disease. Thus, some or all of 
    the benefits associated with diets high in fiber-rich foods could be 
    the result of displacement of fat and saturated fat from the total diet 
    rather than an effect of fiber per se.
        The agency stated that although the specific roles of the numerous 
    potentially protective substances or displacement of negative 
    substances (e.g., fat, saturated fat, and cholesterol) in such plant 
    foods are not yet understood, populations with diets rich in these 
    foods experience many health advantages, including lower rates of heart 
    disease and cancer. Thus, FDA did not authorize the use of a health 
    claim on the association between ingestion of dietary fiber, or 
    specific fiber components, and a reduced risk of heart disease or 
    cancer. Instead, for cancer, FDA, to be consistent with the available 
    scientific evidence and prevailing scientific agreement, focused on 
    fiber-containing grain products, fruits, and vegetables as product 
    classes. Similarly, for heart disease, FDA focused on fruits, 
    vegetables, and grain products that contain fiber, particularly soluble 
    fiber. Because of the usefulness of dietary fiber or soluble fiber in 
    identifying the types of foods whose consumption is most likely to 
    correlate with decreased cancer or heart disease risk, these substances 
    can serve as identifying markers for selecting useful foods, even in 
    the absence of adequate evidence of a direct effect of fiber.
        FDA is aware, however, of the rapidly evolving nature of the 
    science base relative to these topic areas. FDA intends to update its 
    review of the science by initiating, in the near future, along with 
    other major research and health organizations as cosponsors, a public 
    symposium on dietary fiber and heart disease and cancer.
        With respect to assertions concerning folic acid, FDA disagrees 
    that it should have allowed health claims on dietary supplements while 
    prohibiting their use on foods in conventional food form. While FDA did 
    not authorize a health claim for folic acid and NTD's, in the final 
    rule on heath claims and label statements for folic acid and NTD's 
    published in the Federal Register of January 6, 1993 (58 FR 2606) 
    (hereinafter referred to as ``the folic acid final rule''), the agency 
    did announce its plans to work expeditiously to authorize a claim, if 
    appropriate.
        The agency noted that the Public Health Service (PHS), including 
    FDA, had recommended (Ref. 7) that all women of childbearing age in the 
    United States should consume 0.4 milligram (mg) (400 micrograms 
    (g)) of folic acid daily to reduce their risk of having a 
    pregnancy affected with spina bifida or other neural tube defects. FDA 
    acknowledges that this recommendation evidenced that significant 
    scientific agreement existed regarding a relationship between folate 
    and NTD's but said that there were factors that prevented FDA from 
    authorizing a claim. The agency said that the act must be read as a 
    whole, and that sections 403(r)(3)(A)(ii) and 409 of the act (21 U.S.C. 
    348) reflect the proposition that the use of a substance that is the 
    subject of a health claim must be safe. The agency pointed out that the 
    PHS recommendation stated that there were significant questions that 
    persist about the safe use of folic acid in food. As stated in the 
    folic acid final rule, FDA expected that the authorization of a claim 
    would likely result in significant increases in consumption of folic 
    acid by women in their childbearing years and by the general 
    population, because manufacturers would add folic acid to their 
    products in order to claim that these products were useful in reducing 
    the risk of birth defects. Intakes of multiple doses of folic acid from 
    supplements and from its increased presence in the food supply could 
    rapidly result in intakes of 3 to 7 mg (3,000 to 7,000 g) per 
    day (58 FR 2606 at 2614). Such intakes represent increases of 10-fold 
    or more above current intakes.
        In the folic acid final rule, the agency reviewed the safety 
    considerations raised by such increases in folic acid intakes, 
    including: (1) Potential effects in persons with poor vitamin B12 
    status; (2) potential risks for persons taking medications that 
    interfere with folate metabolism; (3) potential risks for pregnant 
    women because of uncertainties about effects of high blood levels of 
    folic acid on the embryo during gestation; and (4) uncertainties 
    regarding possible interactions between folic acid and other nutrients 
    with increased folic acid intakes. The agency concluded that it could 
    not authorize a health claim on folic acid until the questions 
    regarding the safe use of this nutrient were satisfactorily resolved. 
    In the folic acid final rule the agency described the efforts it was 
    undertaking to address and resolve these concerns.
        Following publication of this document, based on its review of the 
    evidence, its discussions with an advisory committee, and its review of 
    the comments that it received, the agency tentatively concluded that 
    the safety problems raised by folic acid can be resolved by setting a 
    safe upper limit of intake of 1 mg folate per day for all population 
    groups. The agency announced its tentative conclusion in a proposal to 
    authorize a health claim on folate and neural tube defects (58 FR 
    53254, October 14, 1993). In companion documents, FDA also proposed to 
    amend the food additive regulation for folic acid to specify the foods 
    that could be fortified with folic acid and the level at which they 
    could be fortified (58 FR 53312) and to amend the standards of identity 
    for specific cereal-grain products to permit the addition of folic acid 
    (58 FR 53305).
        Thus, based on this review of the agency's actions, it is clear 
    that the nondiscriminatory provision suggested in the comments is not 
    necessary. When FDA has concluded that a substance has a relationship 
    to a disease, FDA has acted to authorize a claim (see final rule on 
    calcium and osteoporosis (58 FR 2665) and the proposed rule on folic 
    acid and neural tube defects (58 FR 53254)). In the case of antioxidant 
    vitamins and cancer, dietary fiber and heart disease, and dietary fiber 
    and cancer, the evidence did not establish that the named substances 
    had an effect on the named diseases. The evidence showed that these 
    nutrients were merely markers of foods that had been shown in studies 
    to affect the risk of the disease. FDA has reflected the scientific 
    evidence in the claims that it has authorized and proposed to 
    authorize. Any other course of action would be inconsistent with the 
    act because it would result in claims that were both not scientifically 
    valid and misleading.
    
    B. Alternative Approaches
    
        In the dietary supplement health claims proposal (58 FR 33700 at 
    33703), FDA advised that a variety of approaches had come to FDA's 
    attention about how health claims for dietary supplements would best be 
    regulated under the 1990 amendments. These approaches came to the 
    agency's attention by various means, including the comments on the 
    health claims proposal that addressed the most appropriate method for 
    regulating dietary supplements, testimony before Congress about 
    implementation of the 1990 amendments, as well as the legislative 
    history of the 1990 amendments. FDA carefully evaluated each of these 
    approaches to determine how they compare with the characteristics that 
    FDA has listed above. A number of comments addressed the agency's 
    tentative conclusions about these approaches.
    1. Use of Advisory Committees
        In the dietary supplement health claims proposal (see section 
    II.B.1., 58 FR 33700 at 33704), FDA advised that it had tentatively 
    decided not to adopt a committee-based approach suggested in comments 
    for evaluating the validity of health claims on herbs. This approach, 
    known as the Botanical Ingredient Review (BIR), would involve the 
    establishment of expert panels under the direction of an oversight 
    committee. FDA would participate as a nonvoting member of the expert 
    panels. The oversight committee, which would be charged with the 
    responsibility of reviewing all health claim petitions pertaining to 
    herb or botanical components, would relieve FDA of all responsibility 
    for initial review of these petitions. Each expert panel would conduct 
    an evaluation of scientific data pertaining to the requested claim, 
    subject the evaluation to peer review, and prepare a final 
    recommendation about the claim. The recommendation and all supporting 
    documents would then be forwarded to FDA, and the agency would be 
    permitted 120 days to approve, disapprove, or modify the report. Under 
    draft regulations prepared and submitted for FDA adoption by one 
    comment on the health claims proposal, there would be a codified 
    presumption in favor of the committee recommendation.
        The agency based its tentative decision about the BIR on its belief 
    that the suggested approach would involve a significant transfer of 
    agency authority on health claims because of this presumption in the 
    draft regulations submitted by the comment. Under this presumption, FDA 
    would be obligated to prove that the committee was wrong if the agency 
    decided not to follow the committee's recommendation. In such 
    circumstances, FDA could be forced to propose to authorize health 
    claims that it was not satisfied were scientifically valid. FDA noted 
    that there is no basis under the act for such a transfer. Also, the 
    agency noted that the creation of such a committee would be financially 
    burdensome and stated that it would be inappropriate to commit its 
    limited resources to a committee with as narrow a scope as that 
    suggested by the comment.
        3. A few comments addressed this advisory committee issue. Some 
    comments voiced opposition to FDA's tentative decision not to establish 
    a BIR. These comments disputed the agency's assertion that the 
    establishment of a BIR would involve any transfer of authority, noting 
    that FDA would retain full and final discretion in approving health 
    claims. The comments also disputed FDA's finding that the creation of a 
    BIR would be burdensome and costly in light of the agency's limited 
    resources. The comments stated that such a finding is inconsistent with 
    FDA's current use of advisory committees for very narrow subject 
    matters such as over-the-counter (OTC) antiplaque products, circulatory 
    system medical devices, and drug abuse. The comments stated that the 
    use of a BIR to help screen petitions from the much larger herbal 
    products industry would be an efficient, economical, and scientifically 
    credible way to ration FDA's scarce resources and would also help FDA 
    meet statutorily-imposed deadlines for actions on petitions that it 
    might not otherwise be able to meet.
        The comments also asserted that the agency's statement that it has 
    the ``ultimate responsibility to determine whether the petitioned-for 
    health claim is valid'' implies a mistrust of the integrity of the BIR 
    process and the involved scientists and reveals an agency belief that 
    it is the only authority competent to judge the scientific validity of 
    health claims for herbal dietary supplements. The comments disagreed 
    with such a conclusion and argued that health claim petitions will only 
    receive adequate and full consideration from the scientific community 
    best qualified to determine whether they meet the significant 
    scientific agreement standard set by Congress through the creation of a 
    BIR, which would represent the most competent and knowledgeable body in 
    a field that remains largely esoteric to FDA. One of these comments 
    suggested that appropriate selections for herbal experts panels might 
    include experienced herbal practitioners who are familiar with 
    potential adverse reactions to herbs as well as medical practitioners 
    in foreign countries where herb safety has been studied by government 
    and industry panels. The comment stated that the inclusion of foreign 
    medical practitioners would be especially appropriate during the 
    evaluation of a claim whose merits are agreed upon throughout the world 
    but are not generally recognized in the United States, such as in the 
    case of using peppermint tea for its soothing or carminative effects on 
    the digestive tract.
        However, one comment supported the agency's tentative decision not 
    to adopt the BIR process. The comment stated that FDA could well be 
    legally liable for decisions made by the BIR that were later shown to 
    have placed the public health at risk.
        Several comments called for FDA to establish an advisory committee 
    for health claims for dietary supplements where the committee would 
    select expert panels responsible for the evaluation of proposed health 
    claims for all dietary supplements. The comments suggested that the 
    expert panels should be composed of scientists and health care 
    professionals with expertise on a given nutrient-disease relationship 
    as well as nonvoting industry and consumer representatives. These 
    comments contended that one reason for the agency's slowness in 
    approving a health claim for folic acid has been its reliance on 
    advisory panels that were not sufficiently familiar with the research 
    in the area and who had to be educated about the strength of the 
    evidence before they could act. Some of these comments suggested that 
    FDA could retain the authority to reject the recommendations of the 
    committee, as long as it published its reasons for doing so.
        Another comment stated that both the dietary supplement industry 
    and FDA have been slow to recognize and utilize a great deal of 
    research that has been done in the area of nutrition and health. The 
    comment attributed this slowness to a gap between the scientific 
    community, FDA, and the dietary supplement industry. The comment 
    suggested that in order to close this gap, FDA should form a committee 
    of its leading scientists to meet with a similar industry committee 
    every 3 to 6 months, or as required, to discuss the latest research in 
    the area of nutrition and health published in highly accredited 
    scientific journals so that the research could be used to create and 
    support health claim petitions. The comment suggested that when the 
    agency committee and the industry reach an agreement on the data, FDA 
    could authorize the use of a health claim on the nutrient-disease 
    relationship on which there is agreement.
        FDA recognizes that advisory committees may make valuable 
    contributions in assisting the agency to evaluate scientific evidence 
    about health claims in certain circumstances. For example, the Folic 
    Acid Subcommittee of the Food Advisory Committee provided valuable 
    recommendations in support of FDA proposing to authorize a health claim 
    for folic acid and proposing to fortify cereal-grain products. The 
    agency intends to continue its use of advisory committees wherever the 
    need arises.
        FDA believes, however, that it should retain the right to decide 
    when the use of an advisory committee is necessary. There may 
    frequently be circumstances in which evidence establishes that use of 
    advisory committees is not necessary because the evidence shows that 
    the claim is clearly supported or clearly not supported. In addition, 
    if the agency were to establish a standing advisory committee for 
    health claims, FDA would want it to have a broader focus than just 
    dietary supplements. FDA's view is that claims should focus on the 
    substance, and not the food in which it is found, because the primary 
    issue is whether the substance-disease relationship has been 
    established. Thus, if FDA were to establish a standing advisory 
    committee, it would be on health claims in general. Although a number 
    of comments asserted that FDA lacks knowledge of herbal products, the 
    agency believes that its personnel are fully competent to evaluate 
    properly substantiated petitions concerning health claims in this area. 
    Also, if the agency were to decide to establish an advisory committee, 
    it would take steps to ensure that the membership of the committee had 
    the necessary expertise, including pertinent expertise on herbal 
    products.
        There is an implication in some of the comments that the evaluation 
    of the scientific evidence supporting a claim is somehow different 
    depending on the substance involved. In fact, whether a claim is for a 
    vitamin, mineral, herb, or other similar nutritional substance, 
    including fat, saturated fat, and cholesterol, the skills needed for 
    evaluation of a claim are basically the same. These skills are found in 
    epidemiologists, nutritionists, biostatisticians, clinicians, and 
    experts in the disease being addressed, as well as in people aware of 
    how the substance is, or should be, consumed. Thus, FDA does not agree 
    with the implication in these comments.
        FDA is interested in having communication with the dietary 
    supplement industry. However, the agency does not believe that it would 
    be appropriate for the communication to take the form of the suggested 
    standing committee to meet with a similar industry committee every 3 to 
    6 months. While FDA believes that regular communication with the 
    dietary supplement industry is likely to be useful, the process by 
    which health claims are authorized must be a more open and public 
    process than that suggested by the comment. Certainly the 1990 
    amendments envisioned a public process for claims for substances in 
    foods in conventional food form, as reflected in section 403(r)(4) of 
    the act. FDA has been presented with no convincing reason why a similar 
    process should not apply to claims for substances in dietary 
    supplements.
        Furthermore, FDA continues to believe that the BIR advisory 
    committee approach would involve a significant transfer of agency 
    authority for health claims, even though comments on the health claims 
    proposal and the dietary supplement health claims proposal have made 
    arguments to the contrary. The suggested regulation for health claims 
    that was submitted to FDA on May 10, 1991, and referred to by the 
    agency in the proposals that it has issued, states in part:
        B. If the Committee determines that a proposed health claim is 
    appropriate for a particular herb or botanical, either as proposed or 
    as modified by the Committee, it shall forward its recommendation(s) to 
    FDA together with all the data and other information before the 
    Committee when it made its decision.
        C. If the Committee determines that, on the basis of the data, and 
    other information before it, the proposed health claim is not 
    scientifically justified for the herb or botanical, it shall so notify 
    the proposer. The proposer may then direct the Committee to forward to 
    FDA all the information before the Committee with respect to the 
    proposal together with its conclusions and the reasons therefore.
        D. Within 120 days of receipt of the information described in (B) 
    and (C) above, FDA shall either accept the recommendation, reject it, 
    or modify it based upon the Agency's independent evaluation with 
    analysis and reasons for rejection or modification of recommended 
    health claims. In arriving at its decision FDA may consider data or 
    information other than that before the Committee. There shall be a 
    presumption, to be sustained when the record is viewed as a whole, in 
    favor of a Committee recommendation under either (B) or (C). (Emphasis 
    added.)
        Despite assertions to the contrary, the last sentence of paragraph 
    ``D'' obligates FDA to establish that the committee was wrong in order 
    not to follow the committee's recommendation. Ultimately, therefore, 
    there would, in fact, be a significant transfer of authority if the 
    suggested provision were to be adopted by FDA. As FDA noted in the 
    dietary supplement health claims proposal (58 FR 33700 at 33704), there 
    is no basis under the act for such a transfer of authority.
        FDA does not question that experts on an industry committee or 
    panel on herbs and botanicals could be helpful. The agency encourages 
    firms to work through such groups. For this reason, FDA revised the 
    provision pertaining to petitions in the health claims final rule to 
    clarify that the agency will consider all recommendations by such 
    committees and panels (see Sec. 101.70(b)). FDA recognizes that those 
    petitions that have undergone an independent scientific review and 
    received endorsement by qualified expert groups will likely be well-
    supported petitions and could be very persuasive to FDA. Further, FDA 
    is likely to place considerable weight on the recommendations of 
    outside experts, and its decision as to whether a petition should be 
    granted could be influenced significantly by these experts.
        Although FDA encourages firms to work through groups of outside 
    experts, the agency would be concerned if such groups were heavily 
    weighted with medical practitioners as one of the comments suggested. 
    Over reliance on such practitioners, to the exclusion of scientists 
    representing other relevant scientific descriptives, implies that the 
    herbs are to be used for medicinal purposes. FDA stresses again that 
    health claims are about the relationship of foods, rather than drugs, 
    to a disease or health-related condition.
    2. Establishment of an Approach Based on a More Lenient or the Same 
    Standard
        FDA proposed to subject dietary supplements to the same scientific 
    standard and procedure that the statute provides for foods in 
    conventional food form (section 403(r)(3)(B)(i) of the act). The 
    standard, codified in Sec. 101.14(c), states:
        (c) Validity requirement. FDA will promulgate regulations 
    authorizing a health claim only when it determines, based on the 
    totality of publicly available scientific evidence (including 
    evidence from well-designed studies conducted in a manner which is 
    consistent with generally recognized scientific procedures and 
    principles), that there is significant scientific agreement, among 
    experts qualified by scientific training and experience to evaluate 
    such claims, that the claim is supported by such evidence.
        FDA explained in the dietary supplement health claims proposal (58 
    FR 33700 at 33705) that it knows of no standard and procedure for 
    dietary supplements that would both be more lenient than the standard 
    and procedure for foods in conventional food form and yet still have 
    the characteristics that FDA considers necessary under the 1990 
    amendments and their legislative history. The agency stated that it had 
    tentatively concluded that a standard for health claims for dietary 
    supplements that is based only on section 403(a)(1) of the act (21 
    U.S.C 343(a)(1)), or that allows health claims based on the existence 
    of substantial scientific evidence, even though significant scientific 
    agreement about the validity of the claim does not exist, would be 
    inconsistent with Congress's desire to ensure that health claims that 
    are made on food, including dietary supplements, are scientifically 
    valid. FDA said that it was concerned that if it were to allow claims 
    in the marketplace whose validity had not been established, these 
    claims would undercut the credibility of those health claims that are 
    in fact valid. The agency said that if it were to allow such claims, 
    consumers would be left little better off, and no less confused, than 
    they were in 1989, before the passage of the 1990 amendments. FDA also 
    expressed its tentative view that the proposed approach strikes the 
    appropriate balance between the congressional concern for consumer 
    fraud, public health, and sound science, on the one hand, and the 
    desire to provide the consumer with information on the other (58 FR 
    33700 at 33706).
        4. A large number of comments asserted that FDA should establish an 
    approach based on a more lenient standard for dietary supplements. Some 
    of these comments argued that such an approach is directed by Congress 
    and cited a statement of Senator Hatch, one of the primary authors of 
    the 1990 amendments, that ``a more lenient standard for dietary 
    supplement[s] is envisioned.'' One comment argued that by providing for 
    the establishment of a separate standard for dietary supplements, 
    Congress had implicitly rejected the rigid standard of ``significant 
    scientific agreement'' adopted for foods in conventional food form. The 
    comment asserted that FDA was therefore bound by basic tenets of 
    statutory construction to adopt a more lenient standard for dietary 
    supplements, as such an action would give meaning to Congress's 
    instructions, whereas the adoption of the proposed standard would in 
    effect render those instructions meaningless. The comment noted that 
    courts have traditionally not interpreted provisions of a statute in 
    ways that would render other provisions superfluous.
        A number of comments stated that using the same standard and 
    procedure for dietary supplements as for foods in conventional food 
    form is counter to the intent of the 1990 amendments because Congress 
    intended to make more, rather than less, information about the health 
    benefits of dietary supplements available to consumers. The comments 
    asserted that health information about the effects of diet on disease 
    is particularly important to consumers of dietary supplements in 
    deciding which products to buy.
        Several comments argued that restricting this information on 
    dietary supplements will deny millions of Americans the information 
    that they need to improve their health and to help reduce their risk of 
    deadly afflictions such as heart disease and cancer. The comments 
    asserted that such restriction will cost the nation millions of dollars 
    in health care expenditures that could have been saved through disease 
    prevention.
        Some comments expressed concern that restricting the use of 
    properly qualified health claims based on preliminary evidence would 
    encourage information-hungry consumers to seek information about the 
    health benefits of various dietary supplements from sources such as 
    books and the media, which may be unreliable and which are not 
    regulated by FDA. These comments argued that adopting a policy that 
    results in consumers turning to information that may well be misleading 
    or outright false is contrary to the educational goals of the 1990 
    amendments. One comment stressed that FDA should assist consumers by 
    encouraging them to reduce their risk of disease by changing their 
    diets, lifestyle, and other factors.
        Comments suggested that FDA should place more weight on the 
    potential benefits of the health information than on eliminating all 
    possibility for consumer misunderstanding or all elements of risk 
    associated with increased consumption of dietary supplements. A few of 
    these comments advised that a more lenient standard would be 
    appropriate for dietary supplements because they are being sold to 
    educated consumers rather than to the general population. Some of these 
    comments disputed the argument that consumers could be misled by a more 
    lenient standard. These comments noted that consumers continue to rely 
    on health messages on products such as cigarettes and condoms, despite 
    the fact that the messages have changed over the years in response to 
    new scientific findings. Other comments stated that studies have 
    indicated that consumers are able to use various advertising claims 
    about diet and disease in a rational and beneficial manner.
        Several comments asserted that FDA should allow the use of 
    preliminary health claims on dietary supplements and foods in 
    conventional food form because it allows their use on drugs. The 
    comments stated that FDA's proposed revision of the``Pediatric Use'' 
    subsection of prescription drug labeling in the Federal Register of 
    October 16, 1992 (57 FR 47423) would allow prescription drugs that had 
    not been tested for safety and efficacy in children to nevertheless be 
    given to children provided that the drugs' efficacy claims were 
    qualified by the statement, ``Safety and effectiveness in children have 
    not been established.'' The comments stated that because these drugs 
    had not been tested for safety and efficacy in children, their claims 
    would be ``preliminary'' at best and misbranding at worst.
        However, many comments argued against a more lenient standard and 
    procedure for dietary supplements. Several comments stressed that the 
    adoption of the proposed standard and procedure is supported by the 
    legislative histories of the 1990 amendments and the DS act. One of 
    these comments maintained that while the 1990 amendments give FDA the 
    option of adopting a more lenient standard for dietary supplements, the 
    Congressional Record denotes a majority opinion in favor of FDA 
    applying the same standard to supplements that the act provides for 
    conventional foods.
        A number of comments also warned FDA that holding dietary 
    supplements and foods in conventional food form to different standards 
    for health claims would lead to consumer confusion, as the health 
    benefits of nutrients derived from dietary supplements would be allowed 
    to be characterized as superior to the benefits of those same nutrients 
    derived from foods in conventional food form. Some comments asserted 
    that the creation of public confusion would directly undermine the 
    intent of the 1990 amendments to clear up consumer confusion about 
    health claim information and would jeopardize consumer confidence in 
    existing health claims, food labels, and the government, particularly 
    public health officials. Another comment asserted that adopting a more 
    lenient standard for dietary supplements could also allow some 
    supplement manufacturers to make unsubstantiated claims and undercut 
    consumer belief in the credibility of the entire supplement industry. 
    These comments asserted that a single universal standard would best 
    prevent consumer confusion by ensuring that health claim information is 
    uniform on all foods.
        Several comments supported the same standard and procedure on the 
    grounds that it would ensure that health claims appearing on the labels 
    of dietary supplements are based on reliable, peer-reviewed, 
    reproducible evidence. A number of these comments stated that because 
    supplements, unlike conventional foods, are taken specifically for the 
    health benefits associated with them, it is especially important that 
    health claims on these products be reliable because more and more 
    consumers are using these products in the belief that the products will 
    protect their health. The comments said that these consumers were 
    responding to the large amounts of recent evidence indicating that 
    vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients may play a role in reducing the 
    risk of chronic diseases.
        Some comments cautioned FDA that the failure to ensure that health 
    claims on dietary supplements are reliable would leave consumers open 
    to fraud. A few of these comments pointed out that many consumers do 
    not have the scientific knowledge to judge the veracity of label claims 
    for themselves and presume that FDA regulations ensure that label 
    claims are properly substantiated. One of these comments warned that 
    older Americans are especially vulnerable to fraud. This comment 
    pointed out that the elderly suffer disproportionally from diet-related 
    diseases, read supplement labels more often than other people, are more 
    trusting of salespersons, and do less research than younger consumers. 
    Other comments warned that unsubstantiated health claims can harm 
    consumers by inducing them to consume products that are inherently 
    unsafe, to consume excessive doses of some substances, or to forego 
    more beneficial forms of treatment for a given malady.
        A number of comments insisted that the proposed regulations will 
    not restrict the flow of information on nutrition and health to 
    consumers. One of these comments stated that roughly 80 percent of 
    supplement labels are already in compliance with the proposed 
    regulations. Other comments noted that educational materials are not 
    covered by the proposed regulations, and that there are many available 
    channels through which information can be freely disseminated other 
    than food labeling. Moreover, one comment contended that supplement 
    labels are neither intended, nor currently used, to educate the public 
    but instead serve to sell the product to which they are attached.
        Some comments stated that applying the same standard to both 
    conventional foods and dietary supplements would create a desirable 
    ``level playing field'' for all food processors and manufacturers. One 
    comment stated the adoption of the proposed standard will provide an 
    atmosphere in which all food manufacturers can move toward the 
    production of healthier foods, which will benefit the public health.
        In FDA's reconsideration of how best to regulate dietary 
    supplements, one of the most significant issues has been the issue of 
    whether supplements should be regulated under a more lenient standard 
    or the same scientific standard as that established by Congress for 
    food in conventional food form. Despite assertions by some that 
    Congress directed that a more lenient standard be established, the 
    legislative history of the 1990 amendments does not support such a 
    position. To the contrary, as other comments point out, and as the 
    agency explained in the preambles of the health claims proposal (56 FR 
    60537 at 60539 through 60540), the health claims final rule (58 FR 2478 
    at 2507 through 2509), and the dietary supplement health claims 
    proposal (58 FR 33700 at 33703), Congress did not intend that the 
    agency be forced to adopt a different standard for dietary supplements. 
    Instead, Congress gave the agency the discretion to adopt any 
    appropriate scientific standard and procedure for dietary supplements. 
    There was nothing in the comments that indicated that FDA does not have 
    this discretion. Indeed, as some of the comments pointed out, there was 
    considerable support in both the House of Representatives and the 
    Senate for adoption of the same scientific standard and procedure for 
    dietary supplements. FDA addressed the position of members of Congress 
    on this issue in the preamble of the dietary supplement health claims 
    proposal (58 FR 33703):
        Senator Hatch left no question about his position that FDA 
    should use this flexibility [to adopt the standard and procedure for 
    dietary supplements that appears appropriate to the agency] to adopt 
    a more lenient standard * * *
        However, other members of Congress were equally clear about 
    their position that FDA should not adopt a more lenient standard. In 
    the October 24, 1990 Congressional Record at S 16608 [Ref. 4], 
    Senator Metzenbaum, the other primary author of the Senate 
    amendments, stated:
        * * * It is my view that there is no reason to do anything other 
    than utilize the same procedure and standard for dietary 
    supplements.
        Whatever approach the Secretary takes, he must establish a 
    system that evaluates the validity of health claims for dietary 
    supplements. The system must be based on the same considerations 
    that guide other agency decisions: public health, sound scientific 
    principles and consumer fraud.
        Further, the House of Representatives clearly did not support a 
    more lenient standard for dietary supplements. The statement of 
    House Floor Managers that appears in the October, 26, 1990 
    Congressional Record at H 12953 [Ref. 2] states:
        * * * Whatever approach the agency takes, it must adopt a system 
    that evaluates the validity of any disease claims made with respect 
    to these substances. Its system must be based on considerations of 
    public health and consumer fraud. As in every similar decision made 
    by the agency today, we fully expect that the agency's evaluation of 
    disease claims made with respect to vitamins will be based on sound 
    scientific principles.
        There is a great potential for defrauding consumers if food is 
    sold that contains inaccurate or unsupportable health claims. The 
    potential is just as great for vitamins as it is for other products. 
    In our view, vitamins and other substances covered by this provision 
    should be subject to at least as strong a standard as is applicable 
    to other foods that contain claims that the food will treat a 
    disease or health condition.
        Nothing in the DS act or its legislative history indicates in 
    any way that Congress changed its position about its goals of the 
    1990 amendments with respect to prohibiting misleading health claims 
    and improvement of the public health through use of valid and 
    understandable claims in food labeling [Ref. 3].
        Although Congress left no question that the exact standard and 
    procedure for the regulation of health claims for dietary supplements 
    is left to the discretion of FDA, and although Congress did not provide 
    direct guidance concerning how FDA should use this discretion, Congress 
    did provide considerable general guidance about the intent of the 
    health claims provisions of the 1990 amendments. In view of the fact 
    that this guidance does not distinguish between dietary supplements and 
    foods in conventional food form, FDA considers this guidance to be 
    applicable to both types of foods. As pointed out above in this 
    response, Senator Metzenbaum, the other primary author of the Senate 
    amendments, stated that whatever approach the Secretary takes, he must 
    establish a system that evaluates the validity of health claims for 
    dietary supplements. He stressed that the system must be based on the 
    same considerations that guide other agency decisions: Public health, 
    sound scientific principles, and consumer fraud (Ref. 4). The quoted 
    statements of the House Floor Managers also stress that the agency's 
    approach to regulating dietary supplements must be based on 
    considerations of public health, sound scientific principles, and 
    consumer fraud (Ref. 2). In addition, these quoted statements make it 
    clear that Congress considered the use of ``inaccurate or unsupportable 
    health claims'' on food labeling to be harmful to the public (Ref. 2). 
    Moreover, Mr. Waxman, one of the House Floor Managers stated the 
    following in the July 30, 1990 Congressional Record (H5844):
        What we have sought to do is to permit health claims but only 
    health claims based on scientifically valid information, and we hope 
    by having that scientifically valid information upon which a claim 
    can be made, that health claims in the future will be healthful and 
    not misleading.
        Furthermore, as the agency pointed out in the January 6, 1993 
    Federal Register (58 FR 2478 at 2526):
        By enacting the 1990 amendments, Congress sought to ensure that 
    health claims would be scientifically valid and not misleading. 
    (See, for example, statement of Rep. Madigan, and statement of Rep. 
    Waxman, [Ref. 2]). Experience had shown that many ``unfounded'' 
    health claims were being used on foods (statement of Rep. Waxman 
    [Ref. 2]). Congress recognized the ``great potential for defrauding 
    consumers if food is sold that contains inaccurate or unsupportable 
    health claims.'' Id. (statement of House floor managers).
        In response to the high potential for health claims to be 
    misleading, Congress legislated that any claim that is not 
    consistent with FDA regulations will misbrand a food. Section 
    403(r)(1)(B) of the act states that a food is misbranded if its 
    label or labeling contains a claim that ``expressly or by 
    implication * * * characterizes the relationship of any nutrient * * 
    * of the food to a disease or a health-related condition unless the 
    claim complies with regulations promulgated by FDA. 
    Sec. 403(r)(1)(B)'' (emphasis added). By taking this approach, 
    Congress chose to permit only those health claims on food that FDA 
    determines to be scientifically valid, effectively recognizing that 
    health claims are so potentially misleading as to be inherently 
    misleading.
        Applying the same standard and procedure to health claims on 
    dietary supplements as that that applies to foods in conventional food 
    form will not affect the availability of any dietary supplements, will 
    ensure that health claims that appear in labeling are scientifically 
    valid and understandable, and will subject all segments of the food 
    industry to regulation in a fair and consistent manner. Those comments 
    favoring the same standard and procedure, for reasons of fairness, 
    control of consumer fraud, and conveyance of valid information about 
    diet and its impact on a disease or health-related condition, serve to 
    reinforce FDA's conclusion that the agency's proposed rule should be 
    finalized as proposed.
        The agency disagrees with arguments that use of the same approach 
    for dietary supplements as for conventional foods would deny millions 
    of Americans the dietary information that they need to improve their 
    health and thereby cost the nation millions of dollars in health care 
    expenditures that could have been avoided. As FDA explained in the 
    preamble of the dietary supplement health claims proposal (58 FR 33700 
    at 33705):
    
        * * * In the absence of adequate data to establish that health 
    claims are valid, assertions about costs associated with the lack of 
    information in food labeling and about the benefits of consumption 
    of substances in dietary supplements are highly speculative and 
    highly questionable. FDA does not agree that it should place more 
    weight on the potential benefits of the health information than on 
    eliminating the possibility of consumer misunderstanding. FDA must 
    weigh the public health impact of permitting a multitude of 
    preliminary claims against the possibility that a significant 
    portion of those claims will be determined to be not scientifically 
    valid. The latter result would likely produce a perception among 
    many consumers that food labels and health claims, even those that 
    are valid, are not reliable. To the extent that, as a result, 
    consumers do not change their dietary patterns to reduce their risk 
    of disease, they will be less healthy, and there will be more 
    needless deaths from disease and more costs to the national economy, 
    rather than less.
    
        When FDA made this statement, the phrase ``adequate data to 
    establish that health claims are valid'' was intended to express the 
    position that until the validity requirements of Sec. 101.14(c) are 
    met, cost assertions about the benefits of substance consumption are 
    highly speculative and highly questionable. In general, prior to 
    fulfillment of this requirement, there may often be studies with a wide 
    variety of strengths and weaknesses indicating that there may, or may 
    not, be a valid association between a substance and a disease or 
    health-related condition. In deciding whether or not to authorize a 
    claim, FDA must consider that, while benefits may accrue from the 
    availability of the claim, there is a very real possibility that 
    significant costs may accrue if the claim is authorized prematurely. A 
    few studies may often be found about a multitude of associations, and 
    many, if not most, of those associations will ultimately be found not 
    to be valid. If FDA were to permit preliminary claims about such a 
    multitude of associations, the agency believes that ultimately what 
    would be lost is the confidence of most consumers in the validity of 
    all claims that appear in food labeling. FDA believes that the costs to 
    consumers of such a situation would prove to be greater than the costs 
    of not permitting preliminary claims. Of greater significance, however, 
    is that needless deaths would ultimately occur where consumers would 
    not change their dietary patterns to adopt a more healthful diet.
        The agency believes that Congress, in its enactment of the 
    scientific standard in section 403(r)(3)(B)(i) of the act, struck what 
    it believed to be an appropriate balance between the costs and benefits 
    of claims on foods in general. FDA is not aware of any reason to strike 
    a different balance for dietary supplements. FDA would like to assure 
    all affected parties that the agency will move as expeditiously as 
    possible to permit health claims once the scientific evidence is 
    sufficiently supportive to conclude that associations between 
    substances and disease or health-related conditions are valid.
        Although some comments asserted that claims based on a more lenient 
    standard would not be confusing because consumers of dietary 
    supplements are more knowledgeable than the general population, FDA 
    pointed out in the preamble of the dietary supplement health claims 
    proposal (58 FR 33700 at 33705) that there is nothing that limits the 
    purchasers of dietary supplements to ``knowledgeable consumers.'' The 
    comments did not submit justification for FDA to change its position in 
    this regard.
        Assertions that use of the same scientific standard for dietary 
    supplements as that established for food in conventional food form is 
    counter to the 1990 amendments because less information about diet and 
    disease will be available to consumers are not correct. Under the 1990 
    amendments, authorized health claims provide considerably more 
    information about the effects of diet on disease where the effects are 
    recognized as scientifically valid than was the case before the passage 
    of the 1990 amendments. In the Federal Register of January 6, 1993, FDA 
    authorized claims with respect to 7 relationships (see 58 FR 2537, 
    2552, 2622, 2665, 2739, 2787, and 2820). Also, in the Federal Register 
    of October 14, 1993 (58 FR 53254), FDA proposed to permit health claims 
    concerning the relationship between folate and the risk of neural tube 
    birth defects. Admittedly, other health claims are not permitted to 
    appear on food labels and labeling, but Congress clearly intended 
    through enactment of section 403(r) of the act that only valid health 
    claims be permitted.
        With respect to concerns that consumers will be forced to seek 
    information about diet and health from
    unregulated sources such as books and the media, if FDA does not 
    authorize preliminary claims, FDA advises that it must implement the 
    provisions of the amendments as Congress chose to enact them. The 1990 
    amendments focus only on food labels and labeling. FDA cannot ignore 
    its clear responsibilities under the 1990 amendments because of 
    concerns about the unregulated sources of information that were 
    mentioned in the comments. Moreover, while such sources of information 
    may lead consumers to seek out products containing particular 
    substances, FDA's action will ensure that the labels and labeling of 
    those products contain only scientifically valid information that can 
    dispel any misconceptions created by the unregulated sources. With 
    respect to other concerns expressed by these comments, the agency 
    believes that the specific required elements in the health claims that 
    it has authorized to date demonstrate that the agency is encouraging 
    consumers to reduce their risk of disease by changing their diets and 
    lifestyle. For example, the specific requirements in 
    Sec. 101.72(c)(2)(A) requires, in part, that a claim about calcium and 
    osteoporosis make clear that an adequate level of exercise and a 
    healthful diet are needed in addition to adequate calcium consumption.
        Arguments that the agency should allow preliminary claims because 
    of FDA's implementation of the drug provisions of the act have no 
    merit. Assertions about FDA's proposed action pertaining to ``Pediatric 
    Use'' for drug labeling in (57 FR 47423) are clearly wrong. The 
    agency's proposed action with respect to requiring the statement 
    ``Safety and effectiveness in children have not been established'' 
    pertains only to drugs for which there is no agency approval for any 
    pediatric population to use the drug. In point of fact, the agency 
    proposed to require this statement as a further warning that the 
    product should not be used for pediatric populations. Thus, this action 
    provides no support for authorizing preliminary health claims.
        As FDA pointed out in the preamble of the dietary supplement health 
    claims proposal (58 FR 33700 at 33706), making dietary supplements 
    subject to the same scientific standard and procedure as for 
    conventional foods does not render section 403(r)(5)(D) of the act 
    superfluous. This section requires that the agency consider what 
    procedure and standard respecting the validity of claims are most 
    appropriate. This is what the agency has done. The fact that the agency 
    has found that, on balance, the standard and procedure established for 
    foods in conventional food form are also the most appropriate for 
    dietary supplements does not render the agency's efforts invalid or the 
    underlying provision superfluous. The agency was charged with 
    exercising its expertise and discretion, and that is what it has done.
        5. A number of comments provided specific suggestions about the way 
    in which a more lenient approach could be implemented. Some comments 
    argued that the approach should be sufficiently lenient to permit 
    marketing of dietary supplements without any restrictions. Some of 
    these comments argued that dietary supplements needed no stringent 
    requirements because dietary supplements could be adequately regulated 
    under the requirement in section 403(a)(1) of the act that the labeling 
    of a food must be truthful and not misleading. Other comments suggested 
    that FDA could require a warning informing the consumer that FDA had 
    not substantiated particular claims appearing on a product. One comment 
    suggested that substantiated claims could be allowed to appear within a 
    specific advisory panel of the label, while preliminary claims would be 
    allowed to appear only outside the panel. Another comment suggested 
    that FDA adopt a split label approach, in which preliminary health 
    claims would be allowed, but the agency would have the right to comment 
    upon them on the label.
        One comment suggested that health claims for which there is 
    substantial scientific evidence but not yet significant scientific 
    agreement be subject to a certification and notification procedure 
    rather than rulemaking proceedings. Under the procedure suggested by 
    the comment, claims could be made for dietary supplements so long as: 
    (1) The claim expressly discloses the absence of scientific agreement 
    as to the relationship, (2) the manufacturer provides FDA with a fully 
    documented certification by a panel of at least three qualified experts 
    that there is substantial scientific evidence supporting the claim, and 
    (3) FDA does not disapprove the claim within 90 days of receipt of the 
    certification. (When additional information is needed, the 90 day 
    period could be extended an additional 45 days.) Under this suggested 
    alternative, FDA would have an opportunity to participate in the 
    selection of the expert panel.
        One comment requested that FDA only disallow the use of those 
    health claims on dietary supplements that are not supported by any 
    evidence, and that it classify all other health claims into one of five 
    categories and allow for their use on products in conjunction with a 
    code system indicating to consumers the level of substantiation that 
    the claim has achieved. The comment suggested that the highest category 
    be full substantiation; the second, those claims that have a high 
    degree of substantiation as judged by non-FDA experts, but that FDA 
    finds to be not fully substantiated; the third, claims that have 
    support in the form of double-blind placebo controlled studies 
    published in peer-reviewed professional journals; the fourth, claims 
    that are supported by some evidence from in vitro studies, animal 
    studies, or other studies that do not involve humans; and the fifth, 
    those claims supported by anecdotal evidence. In support of its call 
    for various approval levels, the comment stated that simply 
    categorizing a claim as ``substantiated'' or ``unsubstantiated'' does 
    not accommodate the reality that full substantiation of a health claim 
    consists of cumulative evidence from many studies. The comment 
    maintained that if FDA were to place all claims that have not achieved 
    full substantiation into the same category, FDA would not be providing 
    a means for the public to distinguish claims that are nearly 
    substantiated from those that are entirely false. Moreover, the comment 
    stated that an agency determination that a claim is or is not supported 
    by ``significant scientific agreement'' often reflects a political 
    decision rather than a scientific one. The comments said that FDA 
    panels comprise a very small percentage of the scientific community, 
    that other scientists often disagree with the panels' findings, and 
    that there even may be differing opinions within the panels themselves. 
    The comment stated that, given these conditions, it is blatantly 
    dishonest and misleading to the public for FDA to make a general 
    declaration that a claim is or is not substantiated.
        A few similar comments called for FDA to devise a multilevel 
    approval scheme for health claims on dietary supplements that would 
    allow statements concerning the traditional use of a product to appear 
    on the label and would permit the label of a supplement that contained 
    a substance that was the subject of a pending health claim petition to 
    indicate that the product was under FDA review for a health claim but 
    not to indicate the nature of the claim. The comments stated that the 
    adoption of this approach would encourage manufacturers of products 
    that qualify only for the ``traditional uses'' or ``claim pending'' 
    approval categories to gather, perform, and submit research information 
    to FDA in order to reach higher approval levels.
        One comment suggested that FDA allow manufacturers to use 
    facsimiles of the FDA seal in conjunction with the various ratings. The 
    comment asserted that this approach would encourage manufacturers to 
    come into compliance with FDA regulations quickly, as the seals would 
    become valuable marketing tools for which consumers look when 
    purchasing supplements, and the lack of a seal would become a marketing 
    disadvantage for a company.
        FDA has considered these alternative standards and procedures 
    suggested by the comments and finds that none of them have the 
    characteristics that are necessary to achieve the goal envisioned by 
    Congress in passing the 1990 amendments. Previously in this preamble 
    the agency concluded that Congress intended that FDA adopt a scientific 
    standard and a procedure that ensure that health claims that appear in 
    labeling are scientifically valid and understandable. None of the 
    alternative standards and procedures offered by the comments meets this 
    objective. One of Congress' primary concerns in passing the 1990 
    amendments was the widespread use of health claims whose scientific 
    validity had not been established (Ref. 1). The purpose of the 1990 
    amendments was to bring that situation under control. The problem with 
    the alternative procedures offered by the comments is that, rather than 
    bringing the use of claims on dietary supplements under control, they 
    would ratify the state of affairs that caused Congress to act.
        As FDA explained in the preamble of the dietary supplement health 
    claims proposal, a standard for health claims for dietary supplements 
    that is based only on section 403(a)(1) of the act, or that allows 
    health claims based on the traditional use of the supplement or the 
    existence of substantial scientific evidence but not significant 
    scientific agreement about the validity of the claim, would be 
    inconsistent with Congress's desire to ensure that health claims that 
    are made on dietary supplements, or on any other food, are 
    scientifically valid. FDA pointed out that if such claims were to be 
    permitted, consumers would be faced with a multitude of claims, some 
    valid and some not valid. FDA stated that it would be unlikely that 
    consumers could distinguish between valid and invalid claims. Although 
    comments on the dietary supplement health claims proposal asserted that 
    consumers would not be confused by a multitude of claims, the comments 
    did not actually go further in addressing how consumers would react to 
    such a situation in food labeling. More specifically, the comments did 
    not provide data to resolve the question of whether consumers would be 
    able to understand gradations of scientific reliability of claims on 
    food labeling, or whether consumers would, in fact, be left as confused 
    as they were before passage of the 1990 amendments. While a number of 
    comments did assert that some studies show that consumers are able to 
    use various advertising claims about diet and disease in a rational and 
    beneficial manner, the studies were not actually submitted. In the 
    absence of the studies, FDA has no basis upon which it can evaluate the 
    assertions of the relevance of the studies to food labeling. In the 
    absence of evidence to the contrary, the agency considers it more 
    likely that consumers would be considerably confused by a multitude of 
    claims with differing degrees of reliability. One of the purposes of 
    the 1990 amendments was to end such confusion (see statement of Mr. 
    Waxman, 136 Congressional Record H12953 (Ref. 2)). Therefore, FDA 
    rejects this assertion.
        Approaches such as those involving a ``split label'' or the use of 
    an FDA seal would also not be consistent with the congressional desire 
    for scientific validity because manufacturers would still be able to 
    market dietary supplements with claims that were not scientifically 
    valid. Even if FDA seals were being used to distinguish those claims 
    that FDA considered to be valid, there would be a question as to 
    whether consumers would be able to ascertain which claims were 
    preliminary and which were not. These approaches would not restrict the 
    number of health claims that were of questionable validity, about which 
    Congress was specifically concerned (Ref. 1).
        Thus, FDA has concluded that it would not be appropriate to adopt 
    any of the alternative approaches suggested by the comments.
        6. Several comments suggested that FDA adopt the reasonable 
    substantiation standard used by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) (see 
    FTC Policy Statement Regarding Advertising Substantiation Program (49 
    FR 30999, August 2, 1984)). The comments asserted that under this 
    policy, FDA could allow manufacturers to make claims provided that the 
    nature of the scientific finding is accurately represented, the degree 
    of evidence is not misrepresented, and the claim passes a rough cost/
    benefit test. The comments argued that this policy would facilitate 
    harmonization with the FTC regulations governing the use of health 
    claims in food advertising, would allow consumers to have access to 
    truthful, nonmisleading, and reliable labeling information, and would 
    still allow FDA to take action against those dietary supplements 
    bearing health claims that are not properly substantiated.
        Arguments that FDA should adopt for dietary supplements FTC's 
    approach for regulating advertising are not consistent with Congress' 
    expectations for health claims. While the FTC and FDA are working 
    together to achieve as much consistency in their approaches to health 
    claims as their respective statutes allow, adoption by FDA of the FTC 
    advertising substantiation approach would not provide FDA the 
    confidence Congress intended concerning the scientific validity of the 
    claims. Specifically, as explained above, one of Congress' main 
    purposes in passing the 1990 amendments was to ensure that health 
    claims made in food labeling are scientifically valid. No such 
    assurance of scientific validity is provided under the standard that 
    FTC must employ. Under that standard, there must be some evidence to 
    support a claim, but it need not rise to the level of establishing the 
    claim's validity. Thus, the FTC standard is not adequate for health 
    claims. In this context, it is appropriate to reiterate FDA's response 
    to comments asserting that it was bound to follow cases involving FTC's 
    regulation of advertising in the preamble of the health claims final 
    rule (58 FR 2478 at 2528):
        Although cases involving FTC may sometimes be relevant, it is 
    important to note that fundamental differences exist between the 
    regulatory schemes administered by the two agencies. Congress has 
    long recognized the division of roles between the two agencies--FTC 
    concentrates on the interests of commerce and economic needs, 
    whereas the objective of FDA is ``the health of the people.'' FTC 
    regulates unfair competition and trade practices, including food 
    advertising. (See, for example, 15 U.S.C. sections 45 and 52.) In 
    contrast, FDA is a scientific agency empowered to regulate the food 
    label, among other things. Under section 403(r)(3)(B)(i) of the act, 
    FDA may permit health claims on foods only if it has determined that 
    those claims meet the statutory test for scientific validity. The 
    laws under which FTC operates do not include a comparable statutory 
    standard. Thus, it would not be appropriate for FDA to follow the 
    case law involving FTC.
    
    III. The Final Regulation
    
        In light of the foregoing, FDA is subjecting dietary supplements to 
    the same standard and procedure that applies to food in conventional 
    food form. The agency believes that this approach strikes the 
    appropriate balance between the congressional concern for consumer 
    fraud, public health, and sound science, on the one hand, and the 
    desire to provide the consumer with information on the other. Thus, the 
    agency is revising Secs. 101.14 and 101.70 to include dietary 
    supplements.
    
    A. Definitions
    
        In the health claims proposal, FDA proposed definitions for 
    ``health claim,'' ``substance,'' ``nutritive value,'' and ``dietary 
    supplement'' to serve as tools for clearly establishing the scope of 
    the types of claims that would be subject to the regulations 
    promulgated under section 403(r)(1)(B) of the act. In addition, the 
    agency proposed a definition for ``disqualifying nutrient levels'' to 
    establish limits on the levels at which certain nutrients that are 
    known to increase the risk of a disease or health-related condition 
    could be present in a food, and the food would still be eligible to 
    bear a health claim (see section 403(r)(3)(A)(ii) of the act).
        In the health claims final rule, the agency adopted definitions for 
    the terms ``health claim,'' ``substance,'' ``nutritive value,'' and 
    ``disqualifying nutrient levels,'' that it revised in response either 
    to comments or to the DS act (see Sec. 101.14(a)(1), (2), (3), and 
    (5)). Also, FDA adopted a definition for the term ``disease or health-
    related condition.'' Although the term is used in the definition of 
    ``health claim,'' and the term serves to identify one of the basic 
    elements of a health claim, the agency had not proposed a definition 
    for it. The agency added this definition to clarify the coverage of the 
    health claim provisions (see Sec. 101.14(a)(6)). Because of the DS act, 
    the agency reserved the question as to whether these definitions would 
    apply to dietary supplements. The agency also did not include a 
    definition of ``dietary supplement'' in the final rule because of the 
    moratorium imposed by the DS act.
        In the dietary supplement health claims proposal, FDA proposed to 
    adopt the same regulatory scheme for health claims for dietary 
    supplements that it had established for foods in conventional food 
    form. To effect this tentative decision, the agency proposed to revise 
    the definition of ``substance'' to make clear that it covers both food 
    in conventional food form and dietary supplements and to establish a 
    definition for ``dietary supplement.''
        FDA received no comments on the former aspect of the proposal. 
    Therefore, the agency is adopting it as proposed. However, FDA did 
    receive some comments on its proposed definition of ``dietary 
    supplement.''
    1. Dietary Supplement
        FDA proposed the following definition for the term ``dietary 
    supplement'' (proposed Sec. 101.14(a)(4)):
        Dietary supplement means a food, not in conventional food form, 
    that supplies a component to supplement the diet by increasing the 
    total dietary intake of that component.
        In the past, FDA has taken a position that the term ``dietary 
    supplement'' applied only to supplements composed of essential 
    nutrients. However, FDA did not propose to limit the definition in 
    Sec. 101.14(a) in this way because section 403(r)(5)(D) of the act 
    includes dietary supplements of herbs, substances that generally 
    contain few essential nutrients. In addition, the legislative history 
    indicates that the term ``other nutritional substances'' could include 
    a number of substances that have not been shown to be essential or 
    nutrients (Ref. 4).
        7. One comment commended the agency for proposing a definition of 
    ``dietary supplement'' that recognized that these foods could have 
    components other than substances known to be essential nutrients. The 
    comment asserted that the proposed definition would appropriately move 
    supplements out of the food additive category.
        FDA advises that the comment's assertion that the definition moves 
    dietary supplements out of the food additive category is not correct. A 
    dietary supplement, as the definition recognizes, is a compounded food 
    that may include compounds that are food additives. Whether a component 
    of food is a food additive or not is determined under section 201(s) of 
    the act (21 U.S.C. 321(s)), not section 403(r) of the act. Congress 
    specifically provided in section 9 of the 1990 amendments that these 
    amendments ``shall not be construed to alter the authority of the 
    Secretary of Health and Human Services * * * under the Federal Food, 
    Drug, and Cosmetic Act.'' Thus, the components of dietary supplements 
    that are food additives are still fully subject to the food additive 
    requirements under section 409 of the act.
        8. A few comments requested that the proposed definition of 
    ``dietary supplement'' be modified to explicitly include all herbal 
    extracts. One of these comments asserted that the definition should 
    include ``processed or unprocessed plant parts (bark, leaves, flowers, 
    fruits, and stems) as well as extracts of essential oils, marketed as 
    teas, powders, tablets, capsules, and elixirs.''
        FDA is adopting the definition of ``dietary supplement'' as 
    proposed. This definition is intentionally broad to cover the range of 
    substances that, under the legislative history, could be included in a 
    dietary supplement and could be the subject of a health claim. The 
    purpose of the definition of ``dietary supplement'' is not to define 
    the substances that may be eligible to be the subject of a health claim 
    but to define the form in which they are to be sold to be subject to 
    regulation as a ``dietary supplement.'' Under the scheme that FDA is 
    adopting, and that Congress envisioned (see Ref. 4, statement of 
    Senator Metzenbaum), the determination as to what substances are 
    appropriately the subject of a health claim is made on a case-by-case 
    basis, based on the factors set out in Sec. 101.14(b) and the evidence 
    presented to the agency. The agency disagrees with the comment in one 
    respect, however. Teas are food in conventional food form and thus not 
    included within the definition of ``dietary supplement.''
        9. One comment asserted the definition of ``dietary supplement'' 
    should include foods in conventional food form that are fortified with 
    a vitamin or mineral to a level of 50 percent or more of the Reference 
    Daily Intake (RDI) per serving (e.g., many breakfast cereals).
        FDA does not agree that such foods should be included in the 
    definition of ``dietary supplements.'' As discussed in the preamble to 
    the dietary supplement proposal (58 FR 33700 at 33707), FDA has limited 
    this definition to foods not in conventional food form to reflect the 
    approach taken by Congress in the DS act. The manager's statements for 
    the DS act from the Senate and the House (Ref. 3) clearly state that 
    the moratorium on the implementation of the 1990 amendments applies 
    only to dietary supplements ``not in the form of conventional food.'' 
    Because foods in conventional food form were not covered by the DS act 
    moratorium, the health claims regulations already apply to them. 
    Consequently, FDA believes that it will reduce confusion about the 
    impact of these regulations if the agency limits coverage of the term 
    ``dietary supplements'' to foods not in conventional food form. Of 
    course, foods in conventional food form that are formulated to 
    supplement the dietary intake of nutrients will be free to reflect 
    their characteristics in their common or usual name (e.g., vitamin and 
    mineral supplement cereal).
    2. Nutritive Value
        In the health claims final rule, FDA defined ``nutritive value'' as 
    follows:
        Nutritive value  means a value in sustaining human existence by 
    such processes as promoting growth, replacing loss of essential 
    nutrients, or providing energy.
        Although FDA did not propose any changes in the definition of 
    ``nutritive value'' in the dietary supplement health claims proposal, 
    many comments expressed concern about the impact of this definition in 
    conjunction with the preliminary requirement in Sec. 101.14(b)(3)(i) 
    that the substance that is the subject of a health claim contribute 
    taste, aroma, or nutritive value, or any technical effect listed in 
    Sec. 170(o), and that the substance must retain that attribute when 
    consumed at levels that are necessary to justify a claim. (Preliminary 
    requirements are criteria in Sec. 101.14(b) that have to be met before 
    a substance will qualify to be the subject of a health claim. An 
    indepth discussion of all preliminary requirements follows in section 
    III.B. of this document.)
        10. Some comments urged the agency to broaden its definition of 
    ``nutritive value.'' These comments urged the agency to recognize that 
    the processes by which a nutrient promotes health, maintains proper 
    bodily functioning, and protects the body from the development of 
    chronic disease or other health-related conditions are, in and of 
    themselves, characteristic of ``nutritive value.'' The comments noted 
    that the basic function of Vitamin E, for example, relates to its 
    antioxidant properties in preventing cell damage by trapping peroxyl 
    free radicals and inhibiting the oxidation of unsaturated fatty acids. 
    Also, the comments pointed out that fiber does not promote growth, 
    replace essential nutrients, or provide energy, but that Congress 
    specifically required FDA to study the relationship between various 
    diseases and fiber. Some of the comments asked that the phrase 
    ``preventing or repairing the negative metabolic consequences of life 
    processes'' be added to the list of processes that characterize the 
    nutritive value of a food to ensure that such components can be the 
    subject of health claims. A few comments asserted that FDA should 
    revise the definition of ``nutritive value'' to provide for claims 
    about ``prevention'' of a disease or health-related condition.
        However, one comment maintained that the definition of ``nutritive 
    value'' in Sec. 101.14(a)(3) is broad enough to include the functions 
    of most dietary supplements. The comment supported its position by 
    agreeing with FDA's statement in the health claims final rule (58 FR 
    2478 at 2488) that the inclusion of the phrase ``such as'' in the 
    definition ensures that the three referenced processes are examples of 
    how a substance may confer nutritive value rather than as an all-
    inclusive list.
        The comment that highlighted FDA's use of the phrase ``such 
    processes as'' in this definition is correct. FDA intended the three 
    referenced processes to be examples of how a substance may confer 
    nutritive value rather than as an all-inclusive list of the functions 
    that provide such value. As FDA explained in the health claims final 
    rule (58 FR 2478 at 2488), the definition of ``nutritive value'' is 
    intended to be very flexible. The agency incorporated this flexibility 
    in the definition because FDA recognizes that certain substances can 
    play a major role in reducing the risk of certain chronic diseases and 
    may confer their benefits through a number of processes. FDA believes 
    that the agency should evaluate the nutritive value claimed for a 
    substance that is proposed as the subject of a health claim, as 
    described in a health claim petition, on a case-by-case basis. This 
    approach will best ensure that the definition retains its intended 
    flexibility and does not become an unintentional barrier to 
    authorization for legitimate health claims.
        FDA does believe, however, that this preamble should provide 
    guidance concerning how the agency will determine if a claimed 
    nutrient-disease relationship derives from the nutritive value of a 
    substance. In general, the agency will look for evidence that the 
    claimed effect on disease is associated with the normal maintenance of 
    human existence. If the substance is used to correct an abnormal 
    physiological function caused by a disease or health-related condition, 
    the action of the substance is clearly beyond a normal maintenance 
    function, and the health benefit would therefore not derive from the 
    substance's nutritive value. Such a substance would be a drug. (Note 
    also that claims about classical nutrient deficiency diseases are not 
    health claims (see 58 FR 2478 at 2481).)
        FDA recognizes that many of the benefits mentioned in the comments 
    may derive from the nutritional value of a substance. The agency's 
    broad definition of ``nutritive value'' includes assisting in the 
    efficient functioning of classical nutritional processes and of other 
    metabolic processes necessary for the normal maintenance of human 
    existence. Dietary fiber, for example, helps to assure normal 
    intestinal transit time, thereby providing nutritional value by 
    promoting efficient bowel function. Vitamin E provides nutritive value 
    through its antioxidant function of reduction of cell damage.
        With respect to assertions that FDA should revise the definition of 
    ``nutritive value'' to provide for claims about ``prevention'' of a 
    disease or health-related condition, the agency points out that the 
    preamble of the health claims final rule (58 FR 2478 at 2501 through 
    2502) fully addressed this matter and concluded that a claim that a 
    substance can be used in the prevention, diagnosis, cure, mitigation, 
    or treatment of a disease or symptom is inappropriate for a food (see 
    section 201(g)(1)(B) of the act and Sec. 101.9(k)(1) (21 U.S.C. 
    101.9(k)(1))). FDA reached this conclusion because the relationship of 
    a food or a food component to a disease is quite different from that of 
    a drug. The comments making these assertions did not provide any basis 
    upon which FDA could conclude that the agency's position in this matter 
    should be different for dietary supplements than for foods in 
    conventional food form. As FDA explained in the preamble of the health 
    claims final rule, the Surgeon General's Report on Nutrition and Health 
    (Ref. 5) points out that, apart from classic disorders resulting from 
    dietary deficiencies of essential nutrients (e.g., pellagra and 
    niacin), it has proved difficult to demonstrate causal associations 
    between specific dietary factors and chronic or other diseases (e.g., 
    dietary fiber and cancer). The report states:
        Development of the major chronic disease conditions--coronary 
    heart disease, stroke, diabetes, or cancer--is affected by multiple 
    genetic, environmental, and behavioral factors among which diet is 
    only one--albeit an important--component. These other factors 
    interact with diet in ways that are not completely understood. In 
    addition, foods themselves are complex; they may contain some 
    factors that promote disease as well as others that are protective. 
    The relationship of dietary fat intake to causation of 
    atherosclerotic heart disease is a prominent example. An excess 
    intake of total fat, if characterized by high saturated fat, is 
    associated with high blood cholesterol levels and therefore an 
    increased risk for coronary heart disease in many populations. A 
    higher proportion of mono- and polyunsaturated fats in relation to 
    saturated fats is associated with lower blood cholesterol levels 
    and, therefore, with a reduced risk for coronary heart disease.
        Because of these complexities, definitive scientific proof that 
    specific dietary factors are responsible for specific chronic 
    disease conditions is difficult--and may not be possible--to obtain, 
    given available technology.
    (Ref. 5).
        11. Several comments argued that the definition of ``nutritive 
    value'' should include levels of nutrients that are achievable only 
    through the use of fortified foods or dietary supplements. Several of 
    these comments referenced studies recently reported in the New England 
    Journal of Medicine that indicate that vitamin E reduces the risk of 
    heart disease when consumed at levels that are almost impossible to 
    achieve through a conventional diet but that can be easily and safely 
    attained through the use of dietary supplements. These comments 
    asserted that it would be inappropriate for FDA to categorize the 
    involved nutrient levels of vitamin E as therapeutic and to refuse to 
    consider approving a health claim simply because the claim concerns 
    levels of a nutrient above that achievable in a normal daily diet. A 
    few of the comments supported this assertion by noting that the 
    mechanism by which Vitamin E protects against cell damage when consumed 
    at normal dietary levels is identical to the mechanism by which it 
    protects against heart disease when consumed at higher levels. The 
    comments maintained that, in cases such as this one, the agency should 
    approve health claims for use strictly on dietary supplements, provided 
    that the nutrient is safe when consumed at the level at which the 
    claimed effect is achieved, and the supplement is intended to be 
    consumed to optimize health rather than as a drug. The comments 
    supported this regulatory approach by noting that the health benefits 
    of calcium occur when the nutrient is consumed at increased levels that 
    can be achieved through the diet or by supplementation and stating that 
    vitamin E should not be treated differently simply because the 
    beneficial levels cannot be reached without the use of dietary 
    supplements.
        Similar comments argued that FDA should at least avoid establishing 
    a maximum level of a nutrient that is considered to be characteristic 
    of ``nutritive value.'' One of these comments noted such an approach 
    results in an extremely fuzzy line, because the maximum level of a 
    nutrient that is achievable in a diet varies widely from one individual 
    to another. As an example, the comment pointed out that a person who 
    eats ten oranges or drinks a quart of orange juice per day gets more 
    vitamin C than is provided by most currently marketed vitamin C 
    supplements. A few comments asserted that there is much scientific 
    disagreement over what levels of a nutrient are ``nutritive,'' with 
    many scientists contending that levels much higher than the U.S. 
    Recommended Daily Allowances (U.S. RDA) fall within the definition. A 
    few comments requested that FDA explicitly express in its regulations a 
    policy that nutritive value may involve relatively high levels of a 
    nutrient.
        A few comments maintained that FDA should presume that all 
    nutrients function in a nutritive manner regardless of their level, 
    unless it has proof to the contrary. In support of this position, a 
    number of comments objected to the use of niacin's effect on blood 
    cholesterol levels in the dietary supplement proposal as an example of 
    an effect that is not nutritive. One of these comments questioned FDA's 
    assertion that niacin does not exhibit cholesterol-reducing properties 
    when ingested at the levels conventionally associated with its function 
    as a vitamin. The comment stated that niacin's vitamin effect occurs 
    below the level of tissue saturation and maintained that the excretion 
    of niacin when consumed at higher levels known to be associated with 
    cholesterol-lowering effects does not necessarily indicate that tissue 
    saturation has occurred. This comment also disagreed with the agency's 
    statement that the occurrence of liver damage when high levels of 
    niacin are consumed indicates that the effect of niacin at these levels 
    is not nutritive in nature. The comment argued that it is quite 
    possible that niacin continues to have nutritive effects at these 
    levels but simply is overloading the body's normal metabolic pathways 
    for ridding itself of excessive levels of the nutrient. The comment 
    asserted that while legitimate safety concerns exist in particular 
    cases of excessive nutrient intake, FDA should not use this fact to 
    conclude that high levels of those nutrients are inherently 
    nonnutritive in nature and are instead pharmacological.
        Other comments expressed the belief that nothing in the proposed 
    regulations would automatically exclude high levels of nutrients from 
    the definition of ``nutritive value'' and urged the agency to include 
    such levels in instances where they would benefit the public health. 
    These comments also agreed with FDA's decision to review on a case-by-
    case basis whether the amount of a substance is appropriate as the 
    subject of a health claim. One of these comments stated that such an 
    approach would help to ensure that health information about fortified 
    foods and dietary supplements can be conveyed without triggering the 
    drug regulations.
        FDA does not believe that it is necessary for the rules to 
    explicitly state that nutritive value includes relatively high levels 
    of a nutrient. As some comments pointed out, the case-by-case approach, 
    which, as stated above, is intrinsically linked with the preliminary 
    requirement in the provisions of Sec. 101.14(b)(3)(i), provides the 
    agency with considerable flexibility with respect to high levels of 
    substances in dietary supplements. Under this approach, FDA has not, as 
    a general rule, established any maximum level at which a nutrient would 
    cease to have ``nutritive value.'' Furthermore, the agency advises that 
    there is no basis for concerns that FDA would use safety concerns alone 
    to conclude that high levels of nutrients are pharmacological. FDA will 
    not do so.
        As some of the comments pointed out, petitions for claims that 
    require that high levels of substances be ingested should have no 
    problem demonstrating that the substance has nutritive value where the 
    mechanism by which the substance affects the risk of disease at these 
    high levels is the same as the mechanism by which it functions as a 
    nutrient at normal dietary levels. However, it will still be necessary, 
    as the agency explained in response to the previous comment, for the 
    petition to show that the substance's effect on disease is associated 
    with the normal functioning of the human body (e.g., the substance 
    could not be used to correct an abnormal physiological function caused 
    by a disease or health-related condition.)
        In its response to the previous comment, the agency acknowledged 
    that vitamin E provides nutritive value through its antioxidant 
    function of reduction of cell damage. If there are situations where it 
    can be established that this same antioxidant mechanism affects the 
    risk of disease when the vitamin is consumed at levels significantly 
    higher than normal dietary levels, such levels would satisfy the 
    requirement in Sec. 101.14(b)(3)(i) that a substance retain its food 
    attribute (i.e., its nutritive value) when consumed at levels that are 
    necessary to justify a claim.
        FDA does not agree, however, that it should presume that all 
    nutrients function in a nutritive manner, regardless of their level, 
    unless it has proof to the contrary. It would not be practicable for 
    the agency to bear the burden of determining the mechanism by which the 
    claimed effect is occurring for each petitioned claim. Thus, the agency 
    finds that it is appropriate to require that petitioners provide the 
    basis for why it is reasonable to conclude that the claimed effect is 
    nutritional and not pharmacological. However, the agency does not 
    necessarily expect absolute proof on this issue. FDA will evaluate 
    petitions on this issue on a case-by-case basis.
        The agency has considered assertions that the dietary supplement 
    proposal should not have cited the cholesterol-reducing properties of 
    niacin as an example of a high dose effect that is not nutritive. FDA 
    has again concluded that niacin is an appropriate example because there 
    are significant indications that a nutritive mechanism is not 
    responsible for the cholesterol-lowering effect that occurs with high 
    levels of niacin intake. When FDA stated in the dietary supplement 
    proposal that levels of niacin necessary to produce the cholesterol-
    lowering effect are far in excess of the levels at which there is 
    tissue saturation for niacin's vitamin function, the agency was 
    attempting to explain that for niacin's function as a vitamin there is 
    a level beyond which additional niacin will not provide additional 
    functional results for that vitamin. The term ``tissue saturation'' may 
    imply either this type of situation (sometimes referred to as 
    ``function saturation'') or the type of situation referred to in one of 
    the comments wherein the tissue is saturated with a concentration of a 
    substance, and more substance could immediately spill out into the 
    urine. FDA was not attempting to assert that the tissue itself was 
    actually saturated. There is no question that additional niacin will be 
    absorbed by cells when the vitamin function saturation level is 
    reached.
        In addition to the situation with vitamin function saturation, 
    there are other indications that the cholesterol-reducing properties of 
    niacin do not result from the same mechanism as that presented by its 
    vitamin function. Vitamin function saturation may be achieved through 
    dietary supplementation with either of the two forms of the vitamin, 
    nicotinic acid or nicotinamide. However, only nicotinic acid provides, 
    at high levels, the cholesterol-reducing effects. Such effects do not 
    appear with high level consumption of nicotinamide (Ref. 6). If the 
    same mechanism were involved with the vitamin function of niacin as 
    with the cholesterol-reducing properties of niacin, both forms of this 
    vitamin should have cholesterol-reducing properties.
    3. Health Claim
        In the dietary supplement health claim proposal, FDA did not 
    propose to make any modifications in the definition of ``health claim'' 
    in Sec. 101.14(a)(1):
        Health claim means any claim made on the label or in labeling of 
    a food, including a dietary supplement, that expressly or by 
    implication, including ``third party'' references, written 
    statements (e.g., a brand name including a term such as ``heart''), 
    symbols (e.g., a heart symbol), or vignettes, characterizes the 
    relationship of any substance to a disease or health-related 
    condition. Implied health claims include those statements, symbols, 
    vignettes, or other forms of communication that suggest, within the 
    context in which they are presented, that a relationship exists 
    between the presence or level of any substance in the food and a 
    disease or health-related condition.Nonetheless, FDA received 
    several comments on this definition.
        12. Some comments asserted that FDA should clarify the types of 
    statements that will be regulated as health claims. A few of these 
    comments asked whether statements that indicate that a product may be 
    useful in maintaining good health (e.g., ``Substance X may be 
    beneficial to good health'') or that describe the biochemical functions 
    of vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients (e.g., ``Vitamin A is 
    necessary for good eyesight,'' ``Protein helps build a strong body'') 
    will be considered to be health claims. The comments objected to FDA's 
    failure to provide clear instruction in this regard. These comments 
    asserted that the agency's allowance of case-by-case interpretation of 
    the regulations will hinder industry compliance, create enforcement 
    problems for the agency, and cause continued antagonism between FDA and 
    the food industry.
        FDA believes that it provided ample guidance on what types of 
    statements constitute health claims in the health claims final rule. As 
    the agency explained in the preamble of that rule (58 FR 2478 at 2479 
    through 2488), the definition establishes that a claim must have at 
    least two basic elements for it to be regulated as a ``health claim.'' 
    First, the claim must be about a ``substance'' as defined in 
    Sec. 101.14(a)(2). Secondly, the claim must characterize the 
    relationship of that substance to a ``disease or health-related 
    condition,'' as defined in Sec. 101.14(a)(6):
        Disease or health-related condition means damage to an organ, 
    part, structure, or system of the body such that it does not 
    function properly (e.g., cardiovascular disease), or a state of 
    health leading to such dysfunctioning (e.g., hypertension); except 
    that diseases resulting from essential nutrient deficiencies (e.g., 
    scurvy, pellagra) are not included in this definition (claims 
    pertaining to such diseases are thereby not subject to 101.14 or 
    101.70).
        If a statement has one of these elements without the other, it 
    would not be a ``health claim,'' although it may still be subject to 
    regulation under other provisions of the act (e.g., the requirement 
    of section 403(a)(1) of the act that a label statement be truthful 
    and not misleading). Thus, all of the statements mentioned by the 
    comments would not be health claims because they do not address a 
    disease or health-related condition as defined under 
    Sec. 101.14(a)(6). The agency has provided a lengthy and detailed 
    discussion on what types of statements constitute health claims in 
    the health claims final rule at the pages cited above.
        12. A few comments asked whether FDA would remove or prohibit the 
    publishing of books containing information on health claims and argued 
    that such regulations would clearly be unconstitutional. Other comments 
    addressed the issue of whether FDA's health claims regulations for 
    dietary supplements would apply to advertising. One of these comments 
    interpreted an excerpt from the report of FDA's Task Force on Dietary 
    Supplements as an attempt to disallow the use of unapproved health 
    claims in magazines, newsletters, or other media channels unless the 
    information has been preapproved by FDA. That excerpt reads:
        The task force considered various issues in its deliberations, 
    including how to assure the safety of dietary supplements; how to 
    limit the potential for fraud, i.e., disease claims made on labels 
    or through other means, e.g., magazine articles, newsletters, and 
    advertisements * * *.
        The comment further asserted that this same intent is reflected in 
    the health claim regulations proposed in November 1991. The comment 
    stated that this broad-based application of the health claims 
    regulations would severely jeopardize the reporting of health and 
    disease-related information in almost every form of media, would 
    inhibit the evolution of scientific knowledge, would have a significant 
    negative impact on the public health of America, and was likely 
    unconstitutional.
        FDA advises that the provisions of this regulation pertain only to 
    a product's label and labeling. This regulation does nothing to censor 
    the content of books, magazines, or advertising. This regulation also 
    does not in any way regulate the availability of books, magazines, or 
    advertising. However, firms sometimes choose to use such material as 
    labeling for their products, and if used as such, the material would be 
    subject to this regulation. For example, sometimes firms copy an 
    article from a magazine and display that article with a product that is 
    offered for sale. Under such circumstances, the article would be a part 
    of the labeling of that product. What is significant to note is that 
    these regulations in no way limit what articles may be published, or 
    what books may be printed. They limit only the claims that may be made 
    in the labeling of food products. Under the act, advertising may 
    provide objective evidence of what the intended use of a particular 
    product is. If the advertising reveals that the product is intended to 
    be used as a drug, the product may be regulated as a drug. In addition, 
    claims made in advertising may affect the type of nutrition labeling 
    that is provided (see Sec. 101.9(j)). Claims made in advertising, 
    however, are not subject to section 403(r)(1)(B) of the act.
        Thus, the agency finds no merit in the concerns expressed by these 
    comments.
    
    B. Preliminary Requirements for a Claim
    
        In the health claims final rule, FDA established several criteria 
    in Sec. 101.14(b) that have to be met before a substance will qualify 
    to be the subject of a health claim. The criteria provide that the 
    substance must: (1) Be associated with a disease or health-related 
    condition for which the general U.S. population is at risk 
    (alternatively, the relevance of the claim may be explained within the 
    context of the daily diet) (see Sec. 101.14(b)(1)); (2) be a food (see 
    Sec. 101.14(b)(2) and (b)(3)(i)); and (3) be safe and lawful under 
    applicable food safety provisions of the act (see 
    Sec. 101.14(b)(3)(ii)). These criteria reflect not only the 
    requirements of section 403(r) of the act but also the fact that FDA is 
    charged with ensuring that the food supply is safe, and that the food 
    label is not misleading. Given that agency evaluations of the validity 
    of a health claim will be resource intensive, FDA decided not to 
    undertake such evaluations unless a petition for a health claim 
    demonstrates that the preliminary requirements are met. While FDA had 
    proposed in November of 1991 that these preliminary requirements cover 
    substances in dietary supplements as well as foods in conventional food 
    form, the provisions of the DS act precluded the agency from applying 
    these preliminary requirements to substances in dietary supplements at 
    the time that the rule was finalized. Thus, the preliminary 
    requirements established in the health claims final rule apply only to 
    substances in foods in conventional food form.
        The dietary supplement health claim proposal contained provisions 
    to subject the components of dietary supplements to the same 
    preliminary requirements in Sec. 101.14(b) that apply to any other 
    substance that is proposed as the subject of a health claim. This final 
    rule for dietary supplements retains these provisions as proposed. 
    Specific reference to dietary supplements in Sec. 101.14(b)(1) and 
    (b)(2) is not necessary because the requirements in these paragraphs 
    apply generally to any ``substance,'' and FDA's revision of the 
    definition of ``substance'' in Sec. 101.14(a)(2) includes the 
    components of dietary supplements within the coverage of this term. 
    However, FDA proposed to add a specific reference to dietary 
    supplements to paragraph (b)(3)(i) of Sec. 101.14 to clarify that the 
    substance may be a component of a food that is in the form of a dietary 
    supplement. The only comments on the issue agreed with the agency's 
    proposed revision. Accordingly, as proposed, FDA is including in the 
    final regulations a reference to dietary supplements in the codified 
    language of Sec. 101.14(b)(3)(i). Specifically, FDA is inserting the 
    phrase ``regardless of whether the food is in conventional food form or 
    dietary supplement form'' into Sec. 101.14(b)(3)(i).
    1. Effect on General Population
        13. One comment argued that the proposed requirement that a 
    substance be associated with a disease or health-related condition for 
    which the general U.S. population or a subpopulation thereof is at 
    risk, or that the claim be explained within the context of the daily 
    diet, would prohibit the appearance of health claims on herbal dietary 
    supplements. However, the comment did not explain how the requirement 
    would have this effect, and the comment's own analysis of how garlic 
    would or would not meet various proposed requirements indicated that 
    garlic would meet this particular requirement.
        FDA does not agree that this preliminary requirement will present 
    any significant barriers to the appearance of health claims on dietary 
    supplements. To the contrary, as the agency explained in the preamble 
    of the health claims final rule (58 FR 2478 at 2499), FDA intends to 
    employ a flexible approach in interpreting this provision. The 
    alternative aspect of the provision, which creates the possibility of 
    claims about the relationship of a substance to a disease or health 
    related-condition that affects very few in the U.S. population as long 
    as the petition in support of the claim addresses that fact and the 
    relevance of the claim in the context of the total daily diet, 
    evidences a determination by FDA to provide the widest latitude 
    possible for proposed claims to qualify under this provision.
        14. One comment requested that FDA not limit the diseases or 
    health-related conditions that may be the subject of a health claim to 
    those for which the entire United States is at potential risk. The 
    comment asserted that health claims should also be allowed in cases 
    where dietary factors have been conclusively shown to affect diseases 
    or health-related conditions for which only a particular subportion of 
    the U.S. population is at risk (e.g., ovarian cancer in women).
        FDA advises that the general eligibility provisions of its health 
    claims regulations in Sec. 101.14(b)(1) do not contain the restriction 
    cited by the comment. While these provisions contain a requirement that 
    health claims pertain to diseases or health-related conditions 
    affecting the general U.S. population, they also provide that health 
    claims may pertain to diseases or health-related conditions for which 
    an identified subgroup of the U.S. population is at risk. Thus, ovarian 
    cancer in women would clearly be an appropriate subject of a health 
    claim.
    2. Components of Food Within the Context of a Daily Diet
        The preliminary requirement that a substance that is to be the 
    subject of a health claim must be a food appears in Sec.  101.14(b)(2) 
    and (b)(3)(i). If the substance is present at decreased dietary levels, 
    under Sec. 101.14(b)(2), it must be a nutrient that is required to be 
    included in nutrition labeling (e.g., cholesterol, total fat). If the 
    substance is present at other than decreased dietary levels, under 
    Sec. 101.14(b)(3)(i), it: (1) Must contribute taste, aroma, or 
    nutritive value, or any other technical effect listed in Sec. 170.3(o), 
    to the food and (2) must retain that attribute when consumed at levels 
    that are necessary to justify a claim.
        15. Numerous comments expressed concern about the aspect of the 
    preliminary requirement of Sec. 101.14(b)(3)(i) that requires that a 
    substance contribute taste, aroma, or nutritive value, or any technical 
    effect listed in Sec. 170.3(o), in view of the agency's definition of 
    ``nutritive value'' in Sec. 101.14(a)(3). A number of these comments 
    characterized these provisions as an attack by the agency against 
    dietary supplements. Some comments asserted that the proposed 
    preliminary requirement would prohibit dietary supplements, especially 
    those containing herbs, from bearing health claims. Comments pointed 
    out that many herbs, such as garlic, are specially processed to remove 
    the flavor or odor from the final supplement product. A number of 
    comments explained that such supplements would fail to meet this 
    requirement because their beneficial effects on the body often are 
    derived from substances unique to the plant that do not promote growth, 
    replace loss of essential nutrients, or provide energy. A few comments 
    also noted that many herbs contain insignificant amounts of vitamins, 
    minerals, and other nutrients.
        Some comments asserted that the adoption of any preliminary 
    requirement that would automatically disqualify herbal dietary 
    supplements from bearing health claims would undermine the intent of 
    Congress to establish a nondrug review process for health claims 
    involving herbs. These comments asserted that the 1990 amendments 
    clearly provide that herbal dietary supplements can be the topic of a 
    health claim. Furthermore, a comment asserted that the Court of Appeals 
    held in Nutrilab, Inc. v. Schweiker, 713 F.2d 335, 338 (7th Cir. 1983) 
    that some products, such as prune juice or coffee, may be consumed for 
    reasons other than taste, aroma, or nutritive value.
        One comment asserted that all dietary supplements already meet the 
    this preliminary requirement. The comment noted that a substance to be 
    consumed at other than decreased dietary levels may also be shown to be 
    a food by contributing any technical effect listed in Sec. 170.3(o). 
    The comment stated that Sec. 170.3(o)(20) lists one of those technical 
    effects as nutrient supplementation and broadly defines a ``nutrient 
    supplement'' as ``substances which are necessary for the body's 
    nutritional and metabolic processes.''
        FDA does not believe that it is overly restrictive to require, as 
    it does in Sec. 101.14(b)(3)(i), that a substance be a food or a 
    component of food for it to be the subject of a health claim. Section 
    403 of the act, which includes the health claims provisions, states, 
    ``A food shall be deemed to be misbranded * * *'' (emphasis added). 
    Thus, section 403(r) of the act describes the circumstances in which a 
    food will, and will not be, misbranded if it bears a health claim. It 
    is therefore appropriate for the agency to make it incumbent on the 
    proponent of a health claim to demonstrate that the substance that is 
    to be the subject of the claim is a food or component of food.
        FDA disagrees with the comments' interpretation of the Nutrilab 
    decision. As FDA explained in the preamble of the health claims final 
    rule (58 FR 2478 at 2499-2500), the Nutrilab court adopted a ``common 
    sense'' definition of ``food'' under section 201(f)(1) of the act: 
    ``When the statute defines `food' as `articles used for food,' it means 
    that the statutory definition of `food' includes articles used by 
    people in the ordinary way most people use food--primarily for taste, 
    aroma, or nutritive value.'' Nutrilab, 713 F.2d at 338. Other courts 
    have followed suit. See United States v. Undetermined Quantities of 
    Cal-Ban 3000, 776 F. Supp. 249, 254-55 (E.D.N.C. 1991); American Health 
    Products Co. v. Hayes, 574 F. Supp. 1498, 1508-09 (S.D.N.Y. 1983), 
    aff'd, 744 F.2d 912 (2d Cir. 1984). By describing taste, aroma, and 
    nutritive value as the ``primary'' reasons for consuming food, the 
    Nutrilab court acknowledged that a food consumed for one of these 
    reasons might sometimes also be consumed for an additional purpose (713 
    F.2d at 338 (giving prune juice and coffee as examples of foods that 
    ``may be consumed on occasion for reasons other than taste, aroma, or 
    nutritive value'')). Under Nutrilab, however, a substance whose uses do 
    not include taste, aroma, or nutritive value is not a food.
        In Sec. 101.14(b)(3)(i), FDA incorporated this common sense 
    definition of food and the phrase ``or any technical effect listed in 
    Sec. 170.3(o),'' which reflects the fact that the definition of 
    ``food'' in section 201(f)(3) of the act includes ``articles used for 
    components of food,'' as a preliminary requirement to ensure that a 
    substance that is to be the subject of a health claim is in fact a 
    food. This preliminary requirement is fundamental because both the 
    component of a food that is the subject of a health claim and a 
    component of a drug have a characterizable relationship to a disease. 
    Congress recognized this fact by creating an exception from section 
    201(g)(1)(B) of the act, in the definition of ``drug'' for foods that 
    bear a claim authorized under section 403(r) of the act. Thus, it is 
    crucial to the continuing viability of the act itself that the choice 
    of the test that determines whether a claim that characterizes the 
    relationship of a substance to a disease can be made be based on the 
    appropriate factors. Under the act, that choice turns in part on 
    whether the substance is a food. Therefore, FDA has reflected in 
    Sec. 101.14(b)(3)(i) the judicially recognized characteristics of a 
    food.
        In this regard, interested persons should not presume that 
    inclusion of the phrase ``or any technical effect listed in 
    Sec. 170.3(o)'' in Sec. 101.14(b)(3)(i) means that substances that may 
    be classified within one or more of the categories of food additives in 
    Sec. 170.3(o) automatically meet this preliminary requirement. The 
    classifications within Sec. 170.3(o) are of a general nature to reflect 
    the uses to which food ingredients are put. All of the classifications 
    pertain to the effect of the ingredients on food (e.g., by affecting 
    the texture of the food) rather than on the human body. Only a 
    substance that is used for the technical effect in Sec. 170.3(o)(20), 
    that of a nutrient supplement, has the potential to have a useful 
    effect in the body because of the characteristics that cause it to be 
    used in the food. The ``nutrient supplement'' category includes 
    ``Substances which are necessary for the body's nutritional and 
    metabolic processes.'' As the comments themselves recognized, not every 
    component of a dietary supplement has such an effect.
        In view of the agency's broad, flexible definition of ``nutritive 
    value,'' FDA does not find any merit in arguments that the provisions 
    requiring that a substance be a food should be removed. To the 
    contrary, FDA believes that these provisions will benefit the public 
    health by allowing the agency to devote its limited resources for 
    review of petitions to those that are appropriate for consideration 
    under the health claim provisions of the act. Accordingly, FDA 
    considers these provisions essential elements under the framework that 
    it has created in its regulations for the regulation of health claims 
    and fully consistent with the act.
        FDA disagrees with the comments' characterization of its actions as 
    an attack against dietary supplements. FDA believes that the combined 
    effect of Sec. 101.14(b)(3)(i), the preliminary requirement that a 
    substance be a food, and Sec. 101.14(a)(3), the definition of 
    ``nutritive value,'' will not present dietary supplements with any 
    unreasonable barriers for agency evaluation of potential health claims 
    for components of these products. Without question, these provisions do 
    restrict health claims to effects on a disease or a health-related 
    condition resulting from the nutritive value of substances. However, as 
    one comment pointed out, the current definition of ``nutritive value'' 
    in Sec. 101.14(a)(3) is broad enough to include the functions of most 
    dietary supplements.
        One observation that might bear making in this context is that 
    Congress has given the agency a statutory structure with which to deal. 
    In relevant part, that structure divides the world of substances that 
    have a relationship to disease into foods and drugs. Congress placed 
    the health claims provisions on the food side of the ledger. FDA is 
    charged with implementing those provisions in accordance with the act 
    and applicable legal precedents. FDA has announced its intention to 
    implement the health claim provisions as flexibly as possible, but at 
    some point the agency simply cannot be as flexible as some of the 
    comments have suggested. At that point, the agency would start to erode 
    the scheme that the statute has established for drugs. The agency 
    cannot do that. If Congress intended something that goes beyond the 
    scheme that FDA has established in these final regulations, then what 
    is required is a change in the law itself.
        16. Many comments objected to the aspect of Sec. 101.14(b)(3)(i) 
    that requires that a substance retain its food status (i.e., its 
    nutritive value) when consumed at levels that are necessary to justify 
    a claim. Almost all concern was directed toward consumption of 
    substances at levels significantly higher than those present in the 
    daily diet. Some comments urged FDA to evaluate proposed health claims 
    involving relatively high levels of nutrients on the grounds that 
    categorically prohibiting them would deny Americans beneficial 
    information rather than educating them on how to alter their diets to 
    achieve optimal health. Other comments stated that FDA's categorical 
    refusal to evaluate such health claims because of the nutrient levels 
    involved would directly violate both the Proxmire Amendment and the 
    congressional intent behind the 1990 amendments. These comments noted 
    that the 1990 amendments provide for the appearance of health claims on 
    foods and stated that, subject to certain conditions, the Proxmire 
    Amendment's prohibition against regulating a vitamin supplement as a 
    drug ``solely because it exceeds the level of potency which the 
    Secretary determines is nutritionally rational or useful'' guarantees 
    the regulation of vitamins as foods regardless of the levels of 
    nutrients that they supply. The comments also stated that Congress 
    envisioned the approval of such health claims, as it was aware that 
    dietary supplements substantially in excess of the U.S. RDA's were 
    routinely being consumed by Americans, and it chose to direct that FDA 
    conduct a review of antioxidant vitamins/cancer claims with dietary 
    supplements in mind. Other comments further asserted that FDA was 
    attempting to circumvent the Proxmire Amendment and create maximum 
    potency levels for all supplements by establishing an upper limit for 
    ``nutritive value.''
        FDA does not agree that any conflict with section 411 of the act is 
    presented by a requirement that, to be the subject of a health claim, 
    the substance must be a food, that is, consumed primarily for its 
    taste, aroma, or nutritive value. There is nothing in the health claims 
    final rule or in the regulations established by this document that will 
    affect in any way the availability of dietary supplements or consumers' 
    freedom to choose to purchase them. Rather, the regulations that FDA is 
    establishing are intended to ensure that any health claims that may be 
    made for dietary supplements are scientifically valid. This is what 
    section 403(r)(5)(D) of the act directs FDA to do.
        Nothing in these regulations would necessarily prevent a supplement 
    from bearing a health claim when it contains a level of a substance 
    that exceeds the level achievable in the context of the daily diet. To 
    the contrary, the final rule concerning calcium and osteoporosis, for 
    example, which was published in the Federal Register of January 6, 1993 
    (58 FR 2665), permits a calcium health claim for dietary supplements 
    and requires only that the supplement labeling advise consumers, in 
    appropriate circumstances, that there is no known benefit from 
    consuming more than 200 percent of the recommended daily intake for 
    calcium.
        Section 411 of the act does not authorize health claims for dietary 
    supplements or in any way affect FDA's authority under section 
    403(r)(5)(D) of the act to regulate such claims. Under section 
    411(a)(1)(B) of the act, FDA may not classify a dietary supplement as a 
    drug solely because it contains a vitamin or mineral at a level that 
    exceeds the level of potency that the agency determines is 
    nutritionally rational or useful. Nothing in these proposed regulations 
    would do so. Absent a claim, FDA will not consider a dietary supplement 
    to be a drug because it contains vitamins or minerals at levels above 
    those normally found in food. However, a claim on a product is an 
    indication of the product's intended use. If a claim reveals that the 
    product is intended for a use other than for its taste, aroma, or 
    nutritive value, then nothing in section 411 of the act would require 
    that it be treated as a food.
        17. Many comments addressed the circumstances under which dietary 
    supplements should be considered drugs. A number of these comments 
    referred to the following agency statement in the health claims final 
    rule (comment 49, 58 FR 2478 at 2501):
        A product that is intended for medicinal effects, that is, 
    intended for use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or 
    prevention of disease, is a drug and not a food. Thus, there is no 
    basis under the act for FDA to permit health claims for herbs whose 
    only known use is for medicinal effects. Health benefits of such 
    herbs may appear in the labeling only in accordance with the drug 
    provisions of the act.
        Although a few comments agreed with this statement, many comments 
    expressed categorical opposition to the classification of any herbs or 
    other dietary supplements as drugs. While most of these comments did 
    not offer reasons in support of their position, one comment expressed 
    concern that such a policy would be grounds for FDA to categorically 
    ban all such supplements as unapproved new drugs. Several comments 
    noted that many herbs have traditionally been used both as foods and 
    drugs and asked for assurance that FDA would not automatically regulate 
    such herbs as drugs. Other comments argued that herbs should always be 
    regulated as foods where they are consumed for their nutritive value.
        Some comments stressed that intended use, as stated on its 
    labeling, should be the determinative factor in deciding whether a 
    supplement should be regulated as a food or as a drug. As an example, 
    one of these comments stated that a supplement marketed for a specific 
    therapeutic use (e.g., a vitamin C tablet sold to cure cancer) is 
    appropriately regarded as a drug, while a supplement sold to be taken 
    over a period of time to reduce the risk of developing a disease (e.g., 
    a vitamin C tablet sold to be taken daily to reduce the risk of cancer) 
    should be regulated as a food. The comment asserted that this approach 
    is consistent with FDA's determination that a supplement containing 
    large amounts of niacin should be regulated as a drug when consumed to 
    lower serum cholesterol. Another of these comments emphasized that a 
    consumer's use of a legally labeled product should not have any weight 
    in determining whether that product is a drug. As an example, the 
    comment noted that FDA does not regulate either fiber or water as a 
    drug as long as their labeling does not bear drug claims, even though 
    consumers may use them to facilitate bowel movement or to prevent, 
    mitigate, or treat dehydration, respectively.
        A few comments suggested that FDA determine whether a substance is 
    a food or a drug by its chemical composition. The comments asserted 
    that while the boundary between drugs and supplements is fuzzy at 
    times, drugs are typically synthetic molecules that are of a unique and 
    patentable nature, while dietary supplements consist of natural, 
    nonpatentable materials.
        Another comment stated that FDA should exempt substances taken to 
    treat a symptom of a disease from regulation as drugs, as the act 
    defines as drugs only those substances used in the diagnosis, cure, 
    mitigation, treatment, or prevention of the disease itself.
        Earlier in this preamble, FDA explained that these regulations do 
    not affect the availability of dietary supplements. Again, these 
    regulations affect only the food label and food labeling. FDA has no 
    intention of banning all dietary supplements of herbs or similar 
    substances as unapproved new drugs. FDA will carry out its 
    responsibility to regulate inappropriate claims, but the agency will 
    not attempt to restrict the sale of dietary supplements to consumers 
    unless the supplements present safety concerns.
        With respect to the specific words for use in labeling statements, 
    FDA advises that statements that a product may be effective in the 
    cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease will make the 
    product a drug. However, statements that a product may reduce the risk 
    of developing a disease or health-related condition may, or may not, 
    make the product a drug. Exactly how a substance-disease relationship 
    is to be characterized is one of the issues that the agency will 
    address in deciding whether to authorize a health claim and how to 
    ensure that the claim describes the significance of the substance in 
    affecting the disease or health-related condition. FDA points out that 
    as a general matter, merely using terms such as ``reduce the risk'' 
    instead of ``prevent'' will not automatically make a claim a health 
    claim and not a drug claim. FDA will make a case-by-case assessment 
    based on all relevant factors in determining whether a claim is 
    appropriately subject to the health claims regime. The agency also 
    agrees that the main focus in deciding whether a product is subject to 
    regulation as a food or a drug is the intent of the vendor and not how 
    consumers use the product (although how consumers understand claims 
    that are made can be used to determine vendor intent).
        FDA advises that there is no provision in the act for the agency to 
    exempt statements about symptoms of disease from causing products to be 
    regulated as drugs. Although such statements may not be claims that the 
    product will treat the disease that causes the symptoms, the statements 
    clearly pertain to the mitigation of disease by addressing the symptoms 
    caused by the disease. Section 201(g)(1)(B) of the act provides, in 
    part, that articles intended for use in the mitigation of disease are 
    drugs. Similarly, there is no provision in the act for FDA to exempt 
    natural, nonpatentable materials from the definition of a drug in 
    section 201(g) of the act.
        FDA advises that it not true that all natural materials are not 
    drugs. It has been estimated that about 25 percent of the drugs 
    currently prescribed by physicians are plant compounds, and that an 
    additional 25 percent are related to plants. Therefore, fully half of 
    the drugs commonly used can be considered plant derived. Such commonly 
    used drugs as digitalis, aspirin, quinidine, atropine, and hundreds of 
    others were once considered herbals. Thus, the agency finds that it 
    cannot rely on the distinction of whether a product is natural or 
    synthetic in deciding whether it is a food or a drug.
    3. Safety
        Section 101.14(b)(3)(ii) provides that, to justify a claim for a 
    substance that is to be consumed at other than decreased levels, the 
    substance must be a food or a food ingredient or a component of a food 
    ingredient whose use at the levels necessary to justify a claim has 
    been demonstrated by the proponent of the claim, to FDA's satisfaction, 
    to be safe and lawful under the applicable food safety provisions of 
    the act.
        The preamble of the dietary supplement health claims proposal (58 
    FR 33700 at 33709) explained:
        * * * This showing can be based on: (1) A demonstration that the 
    substance is generally recognized as safe (GRAS) within the meaning 
    of Sec. 170.30; (2) a listing of the substance as GRAS in 21 CFR 
    Part 182 or as affirmed as GRAS in 21 CFR Part 184; (3) a food 
    additive regulation; or (4) a sanction or approval granted by FDA or 
    the United States Department of Agriculture prior to September 6, 
    1958. If the safety and lawfulness of the substance is not expressly 
    recognized in an FDA regulation, the burden will rest on the claim's 
    proponent, as a prerequisite to FDA's evaluation of the health 
    claim, to submit all the scientific data and other relevant 
    information required to demonstrate safety and lawfulness in 
    accordance with applicable petition requirements. FDA will withhold 
    review of the health claim until it is satisfied on these points.
        18. Many comments objected that the proposed safety provisions are 
    unreasonable. A few of these comments specifically asserted that herbal 
    supplements would almost universally fail the proposed safety 
    requirements because most herbs are not GRAS for use as a dietary 
    supplement, are not approved food additives, and are not the subject of 
    prior sanctions or are the subject of prior sanctions that have been 
    waived. Furthermore, the comments complained that FDA's process for 
    acting on GRAS affirmation petitions is notoriously slow and extremely 
    costly. The comments maintained that the proposed safety requirements 
    would discourage manufacturers from submitting health claim petitions 
    for dietary supplements, would delay the approval of such petitions, 
    and could well amount to a total ban on health claims for certain 
    dietary supplements. The comments suggested that FDA require safety 
    determinations only for those substances with no history of safe use 
    and provide that the absence of known safety problems will be 
    sufficient proof of safety for substances with a long history of use.
        Other comments urged FDA to be flexible in its determination of 
    safety for substances in dietary supplements. A number of these 
    comments stressed the importance of FDA recognizing that safety can be 
    determined solely through the historical use of such substances. Some 
    of the comments noted that many components of supplements, particularly 
    herbs, have been used for hundreds or thousands of years without safety 
    problems. The comments also noted that herbs are used safely throughout 
    three-fourths of the world as a principal means of medicine. The 
    comments declared that regulatory authorities in Great Britain, 
    Germany, Japan, and many other nations have researched various herbal 
    supplements and found them to be safe when consumed at the levels of 
    use likely to be contemplated under a health claim petition. One 
    comment also noted that information concerning accurate dosage, 
    indications, contraindications, and quality control measures are also 
    available in past editions of the U.S. Pharmacopeias and National 
    Formularies. These comments urged FDA to accept all relevant data on 
    the safe use of herbal dietary supplements, including foreign studies 
    and monographs that evidence the safety of these products. One comment 
    declared that FDA is legally bound to consider evidence involving herb 
    usage outside the United States when reviewing the safety of herbs.
        One comment asserted that FDA should evaluate the safety of 
    vitamins and minerals in terms of their effect on the normal population 
    and not on those consumers with unusual conditions or sensitivities. 
    The comment acknowledged that such consumers need clear label 
    ingredient statements as well as education on foods to deal with their 
    problems. The comment asserted, however, that these consumers should be 
    held responsible for some degree of self-protection. The comment 
    maintained that this approach is consistent with the agency's policy on 
    persons with allergies to food components. A few comments asserted that 
    the safety of a dietary supplement should be defined in terms of 
    whether or not harm may occur under the conditions of use defined by 
    the supplement's labeling, rather than in terms of an arbitrary cutoff 
    such as the RDI. The comment maintained that a systematic review of all 
    components of dietary supplements is not necessary and suggested that 
    the agency undertake safety reviews on a case-by-case basis where it 
    believes a potential safety concern might exist.
        Several comments asserted that FDA is not equitable in its concern 
    for the safety of dietary supplements as compared to the safety of 
    other products regulated by the agency. Some comments asserted that the 
    safety record of dietary supplements is far better than many FDA-
    approved food additives such as aspartame, against which, according to 
    the comments, the agency receives and ignores thousands of consumer 
    complaints annually. Other comments asserted that FDA's intense 
    interest in the safety of products would be better focused on 
    prescription drugs, which are responsible for over 1/2 million deaths 
    annually as compared to the no or few deaths attributable to the 
    consumption of dietary supplements.
        However, several comments supported FDA's proposal to require that 
    petitioners for a health claim for a substance in a dietary supplement 
    demonstrate that the substance is safe and lawful. The comments agreed 
    with the agency that such a requirement is implicit in the act, and 
    that the labeling law in no way diminishes FDA's responsibility to 
    ensure the safety of foods.
        FDA concludes that the preliminary requirement that the safety of a 
    substance be demonstrated should apply to substances in dietary 
    supplements in the same manner that it applies to substances in foods 
    in conventional food form. The amendment to the act enacted by the 1990 
    amendments cannot be implemented independently of the remaining 
    portions of the act (see section 9 of the 1990 amendments). The act 
    must be considered as a whole, and FDA's responsibility for ensuring 
    the safety of foods is explicitly provided for in other sections of the 
    act (see sections 201(s), 402(a)(1) and (2), and 409 of the act).
        As the agency explained in the dietary supplement health claims 
    proposal, the fact that the act contains such explicit safety authority 
    is particularly significant because the agency will be specifically 
    authorizing the health claims that will be made. In view of this 
    affirmative action, FDA authorization of a health claim places the 
    agency's imprimatur on the claim. Moreover, the claim will encourage 
    consumption of the substance. It would be a violation of the agency's 
    responsibility under the act to authorize a health claim about a 
    substance, whether it be in a dietary supplement or in food in 
    conventional food form, without being satisfied that the use of the 
    substance is safe. Certainly, FDA would have almost no assurance that 
    it would be protecting the public health if it permitted, as some 
    comments suggest, all substances except those that are actually known 
    to cause safety problems to be the subject of health claims. It would 
    be a great and tragic irony if substances that were the subject of 
    health claims because of one effect caused injury because of another. 
    This is the situation that Congress sought to avert by including 
    section 403(r)(3)(A)(ii) in the act. FDA's preliminary requirement is 
    fully consistent with the principles that underlie that section.
        The fact that some herbs and other ingredients of dietary 
    supplements have been used for thousands of years does not necessarily 
    justify a conclusion by FDA that their use under all conditions is 
    safe, but it may. First, FDA needs a basis for concluding that such use 
    was in fact without harmful effect. Second, FDA needs a basis for 
    concluding that consumption of ingredients in a supplement carrying a 
    health claim would be in amounts comparable to those consumed safely in 
    the past. The proponents of claims for such substances are certainly 
    free to demonstrate that the use of those substances is generally 
    recognized as safe based on their common use in food prior to 1958. The 
    agency notes, however, that the use of many of these substances has 
    been primarily as a drug, tonic, or folk remedy, rather than as food 
    (see 53 FR 16544 at 16545; May 10, 1988). This fact is confirmed by 
    some of the comments summarized above. As drugs, the levels and 
    frequency of use of these substances may have been significantly 
    different than the levels and frequency of use that will result from 
    their use as foods. Although the agency will consider evidence 
    involving herb usage outside the United States, FDA still needs to 
    review data on the identity of the substance, the safety of the 
    substance, the use of the substance in food, the context of its use, 
    and the frequency of use in the country where use of the substance 
    occurred (see 50 FR 27294 at 27295, July 2, 1985). Evidence that 
    another country has studied the safety of an herbal supplement and 
    found it to be safe would certainly be relevant and should be submitted 
    to FDA. It is important, however, that as much of the evidence that 
    provided the basis for the country's determination as is possible be 
    submitted to FDA.
        Although formal recognition of safety by FDA admittedly can be 
    lengthy and expensive, such formal recognition is not required under 
    this preliminary requirement. In responding to concerns raised by 
    comments suggesting that FDA recognize manufacturers' private GRAS 
    determinations, the agency stated in the health claims final rule the 
    following concerning Sec. 101.14(b)(3)(ii) (58 FR 2478 at 2502 through 
    2503):
        FDA acknowledges that the GRAS affirmation and food additive 
    listing process can be lengthy. Thus, FDA designed 
    Sec. 101.14(b)(3)(ii) to provide flexibility with respect to the 
    type of showing of safety that is necessary to make a substance 
    eligible to be the subject of a health claim. GRAS affirmation and 
    food additive listing are but two of the procedures by which a 
    substance may meet this preliminary requirement.
        FDA intends to consider the basis of manufacturers' independent 
    GRAS determinations where such determinations are submitted with 
    petitions for health claims and may use its discretion to accept, 
    without formal affirmation, the independent determination of GRAS where 
    FDA believes that such action would be appropriate. As FDA pointed out 
    in the previous comment, however, the agency would not be fulfilling 
    its responsibilities under the act if it were to permit a substance to 
    be the subject of a health claim without satisfying itself that the use 
    of that substance is safe.
        Although FDA will consider all manufacturers' independent GRAS 
    determinations where the basis for such determinations are submitted 
    with petitions for health claims, the agency advises that it will 
    generally not be possible for FDA to judge whether GRAS 
    determinations based on complex scientific evidence are valid within 
    the short timeframes mandated under the 1990 amendments for health 
    claims petitions. Instead, agency agreement with an independent 
    determination that a substance is GRAS will be most likely where the 
    substance is an ingredient, or a component of a food ingredient, 
    that was in common use in food prior to January 1, 1958, in a 
    similar context. However, where such agreement occurs, the agreement 
    does not constitute GRAS affirmation. Instead, the history of common 
    use in food, coupled with the fact that FDA knows of no reason to 
    question the safety of the food ingredient, means that the substance 
    will be treated as if it is an unlisted GRAS substance (as provided 
    for in Sec.  170.30(d) and 182.1(a) (21 CFR 170.30(d) and 182.1(a))) 
    in the manner provided for in the food ingredient list in 21 CFR 
    Part 182.
    
    (58 FR 2478 at 2503.)
    
        Under this final rule, this statement is fully applicable to 
    substances in dietary supplements. The agency believes that this policy 
    on independent determinations that a substance is GRAS demonstrates 
    that FDA will be flexible in assessing conformance with the safety 
    preliminary requirement.
        FDA disagrees with assertions that the agency should evaluate the 
    safety of dietary supplements in terms of only the normal population. 
    It would be unconscionable for the agency to adopt a policy of ignoring 
    adverse effects, some of which could be life-threatening, of any foods, 
    including dietary supplements, on vulnerable segments of the 
    population. Furthermore, there is no basis under the act for such a 
    policy. FDA does attempt, however, to find the most practicable 
    solutions to assuring consumers of a safe food supply. For example, the 
    agency generally does not base safety decisions on atypical population 
    subgroups that will use the product. Where there are subgroups of 
    consumers (e.g., consumers with certain sensitivities) that could 
    suffer adverse effects from consuming the product, FDA may place 
    certain restrictions on the use of the product or rely on labeling 
    solutions (such as those the agency has used for sulfiting agents and 
    yellow 5) as a condition for its safe use, rather than denying the 
    availability of the product to the entire population.
        Thus, for all the foregoing reasons, FDA is making health claims 
    for substances in dietary supplements, like claims for any other food, 
    subject to Sec. 101.14(b)(3)(ii).
    
    C. Scientific Standard
    
        19. Many comments expressed concern that FDA would apply the term 
    ``significant scientific agreement'' in an unreasonable manner by 
    demanding too much supporting evidence on substance/disease 
    relationships before approving health claims.
        Several comments insisted that FDA is misinterpreting the 
    requirements for the scientific standard for food in conventional food 
    form as well as for dietary supplements. The comments asserted that the 
    law does not require that there be significant scientific agreement 
    that a nutrient/disease relationship has been conclusively established, 
    but only that the statements made in a claim be supported by the 
    available evidence. As an example, one of the comments asserted that 
    the requirements of the law would be fully met by a properly qualified 
    label claim such as, ``Although no scientific consensus has been 
    established, several clinical studies suggest that daily consumption of 
    Vitamin C as part of a well-balanced diet may reduce the frequency of 
    colds.'' A number of comments asserted that the standards for 
    authorizing health claims on foods are more stringent than those 
    authorizing the use of drug claims. Several comments argued that FDA is 
    being unduly restrictive by requiring that manufacturers perform 
    expensive randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled tests to prove 
    the validity of a claim under the proposed regulations. These comments 
    stated that such requirements would deter manufacturers from seeking 
    new uses for herbs and other substances used in dietary supplements. 
    The comments maintained that a more lenient standard would encourage 
    manufacturers to engage in research to develop more healthful products. 
    The comments further asserted that the disparate treatment of foods and 
    drugs is especially unfair when the enormous difference in safety 
    factors between dietary supplements and untested prescription drugs is 
    considered.
        Some of the comments asserted that FDA had not been fair to date in 
    its evaluations of health claims under this standard. One of these 
    comments asserted that FDA had approved only four of the ten 
    congressionally-proposed health claims, not seven, as FDA claimed in 
    the preamble to the proposed regulations.
        Some comments maintained that FDA should not require a unanimous or 
    near-unanimous consensus among experts in order to find that there is 
    ``significant scientific agreement'' concerning a claim. A few of the 
    comments pointed out that the legislative history of the 1990 
    amendments clearly indicates that such a level of agreement is not to 
    be required. Other comments urged that FDA consider the requirement for 
    ``significant scientific agreement'' to be satisfied as long as there 
    is agreement among a majority of scientists familiar with the research 
    in a given area. These comments noted that Commissioner Kessler offered 
    testimony supporting this interpretation before the U.S. House of 
    Representatives Subcommittee on Health and the Environment. Other 
    comments maintained that the requirement for ``significant scientific 
    agreement'' only requires agreement among a significant number of 
    qualified experts. One of these comments requested that FDA include a 
    provision in the regulations that the standard of ``significant 
    scientific agreement'' is not one of unanimity to prevent confusion 
    among manufacturers and consumers. A few comments asked that FDA's 
    regulations include a provision that guarantees that ``significant 
    scientific agreement'' will be considered to have been achieved when a 
    credible health authority, particularly an agency of the U.S. 
    Government, recommends the consumption of a nutrient because of its 
    relationship to a disease or health-related condition.
        One comment suggested that FDA not use the phrase ``significant 
    scientific agreement'' to evaluate proposed health claims, despite its 
    inclusion in the language of the 1990 amendments, because the meaning 
    of the phrase is ambiguous. The comment suggested that FDA should 
    simply consider the totality of publicly available scientific evidence 
    to determine whether or not a particular health claim can be justified.
        FDA disagrees with assertions that it is conducting validity 
    assessments for health claims in an unduly restrictive manner. FDA does 
    not require that manufacturers perform controlled clinical trials to 
    prove the validity of a claim. To the contrary, as discussed in the 
    health claims final rule (58 FR 2478 at 2506), the scientific standard 
    for health claims is less stringent than the requirements for approval 
    of a new drug. In the case of a new drug, section 505(d)(5) of the act 
    (21 U.S.C. 355(d)(5)) states that the Secretary shall refuse to approve 
    an application for approval of such a drug where there is a lack of 
    substantial evidence that the drug will have the effect that it 
    purports or is represented to have under the conditions of use 
    prescribed, recommended, or suggested in the proposed labeling thereof. 
    Section 505(d) provides further that the term ``substantial evidence'' 
    means evidence consisting of adequate and well-controlled 
    investigations, including clinical investigations (human studies 
    conducted in a controlled clinical setting), by experts qualified by 
    scientific training and experience to evaluate the effectiveness of the 
    drug involved. (The statutory term ``substantial evidence'' should not 
    be confused with the same term used by some comments to refer to ``more 
    than a scintilla and less than a preponderance'' of evidence.) Based on 
    this statutory direction, the agency has identified a number of 
    characteristics that are present in ``adequate and well-controlled'' 
    studies in Sec. 314.126 (21 CFR 314.126).
        Section 101.14(c) of FDA regulations does not mandate requirements 
    as stringent as those for drugs in section 505(d)(5) of the act. 
    Section 101.14(c) contains no mention of ``substantial evidence,'' 
    ``adequate and well-controlled investigations,'' or of ``clinical 
    investigations.'' To the contrary, Sec. 101.14(c) contains more 
    flexibility than the drug provisions of the act because it provides FDA 
    with authority to authorize claims based on ``scientific evidence 
    (including evidence from well-designed studies conducted in a manner 
    which is consistent with generally recognized scientific procedures and 
    principles), that there is significant agreement among experts 
    qualified by scientific training and experience to evaluate such 
    claims, that the claim is supported by such evidence'' (section 
    403(r)(3)(B)(i) of the act).
        Consistent with this flexibility, FDA did not prescribe a specific 
    set, type, or number of studies as being sufficient to support a health 
    claim in the health claims final rule that applied to food in 
    conventional food form. In that rule, the agency advised (58 FR 2478 at 
    2506) that it would consider all relevant data on a topic, including 
    clinical studies, epidemiological data, and animal studies.
        In addition, the 1990 amendments directed FDA to consider 10 
    nutrient-disease relationships. In the January 6, 1993, final rules, 
    FDA authorized claims with respect to seven of those 10 relationships 
    (see 58 FR 2537, 2552, 2622, 2665, 2739, 2787, and 2820). In addition, 
    FDA has recently proposed to authorize claims concerning an eighth, 
    folic acid and neural tube defects (see 58 FR 53254, October 14, 1993). 
    FDA believes that these approvals demonstrate that it is not conducting 
    validity assessments for health claims in an unduly restrictive manner.
        FDA agrees that the legislative history of the 1990 amendments 
    makes clear that Congress did not intend, in calling for significant 
    scientific agreement about the support for a claim, to require that 
    such agreement represents a full consensus among scientists. The House 
    Report (Ref. 1) states:
        * * * the standard does not require that there be a unanimous 
    agreement among experts. Instead there must be a significant 
    agreement among experts, but it does not require that every expert 
    in the field approve or agree with the claim.
        The agency shares the comments' concern that a requirement of 
    consensus would mean that some valid health claims would not be 
    authorized and, by restricting such claims, would counter Congress' 
    intent that health claims supported by a significant scientific 
    agreement be made available to consumers. The agency never intended to 
    require that claims be supported by a consensus among scientists and 
    has not done so.
        The agency is sensitive to the comments' perception that the 
    scientific standard, particularly the phrase ``significant scientific 
    agreement,'' is subjective. The agency believes, however, that any 
    standard involving the evaluation of scientific evidence and opinions 
    derived from that evidence must be somewhat subjective. FDA, in 
    proposing not to define ``significant agreement'' among experts in the 
    November 27, 1991 (56 FR 60537 at 60548) proposal, noted that each 
    situation may differ with the nature of the claimed substance/disease 
    relationship. The agency believes that in deciding whether significant 
    scientific agreement about the validity of a claim exists, it is 
    necessary to consider both the extent of agreement and the nature of 
    the disagreement on a case-by-case basis.
        The House Report (Ref. 1) makes clear that Congress intended the 
    ``significant scientific agreement'' standard to be a flexible one by 
    pointing out that, in reviewing scientific studies, FDA may give 
    greater weight to the studies that it finds more persuasive. The House 
    Report also clarifies that the overriding consideration in assessing 
    whether to authorize a claim should be the Secretary's level of comfort 
    about the validity of the claim. The agency believes that this 
    clarification provides clear guidance for the application of the 
    standard, and thus it is not incorporating the changes requested by the 
    comments in the codified language of the regulations.
        FDA does not believe it has in any way been unfair in its approval 
    of health claims to date. Earlier in this preamble in response to 
    comment 2, FDA explained why certain specific health claims were not 
    approved. Nevertheless, the agency's statement in the dietary 
    supplement health claims proposal that it had authorized claims on 7 of 
    the 10 nutrient-disease relationships is correct. In the case of 3 of 
    the relationships, however, the claims were authorized for foods rather 
    than specific nutrients. In these cases, as explained previously, 
    although there was sufficient evidence to attribute certain disease 
    risk reductions to the consumption of certain foods, and those foods 
    are marked by significant levels of the nutrients in question, there 
    was insufficient evidence to attribute any disease risk reduction 
    directly to consumption of the nutrients themselves.
        FDA does not agree that it should define ``significant scientific 
    agreement'' as agreement among a majority of scientists familiar with 
    the issues. Commissioner Kessler's statements about significant 
    scientific agreement being 50 or 60 percent agreement were intended to 
    show the contrast between this term and the term ``consensus,'' not to 
    provide a specific definition of ``significant scientific agreement.'' 
    There is simply no bright line that FDA can draw in this area. 
    Ultimately, the agency must exercise its scientific judgment, arrived 
    at after input from the scientific community.
        The agency does not agree that significant scientific agreement 
    should be considered to have been achieved when a credible health 
    authority, particularly an agency of the U.S. Government, recommends 
    the consumption of a nutrient because of its relationship to a disease 
    or health-related condition. While FDA recognizes the significance of 
    such recommendations, Congress charged FDA with the responsibility of 
    authorizing health claims on the food label and labeling. Nonetheless, 
    the agency is mindful of the admonition in section 403(r)(4)(C) of the 
    act that reads: ``If a petition for a regulation under subparagraph 
    (3)(B) relies on a report from an authoritative scientific body of the 
    United States, the Secretary shall consider such report and shall 
    justify any decision rejecting the conclusions of such report.''
        Accordingly, FDA is retaining the requirement for ``significant 
    scientific agreement'' in this regulation.
        20. Many comments applauded the agency's determination not to 
    underrate any scientific evidence on the basis of its cultural or 
    geographic origin. One of these comments noted that the United States 
    is one of the most ethnically diverse nations in the world and stated 
    that a study done anywhere in the world is likely to be relevant to at 
    least one U.S. subpopulation. A few of these comments noted that some 
    of the studies done on herbal dietary supplements have been conducted 
    under foreign drug protocols and requested assurance that FDA would 
    consider such data to be part of the publicly available scientific 
    evidence supporting prospective health claims. Another of these 
    comments asserted that the ``totality of publicly available scientific 
    evidence'' should include not only ``well designed studies'' but also 
    ethnobotanical and other traditional usage information which is often 
    available for herbs and other dietary supplements.
        The agency reaffirms its commitment to consider any evidence 
    submitted in support of the scientific merits of a claim and in the 
    context of the totality of available evidence. FDA will not underrate 
    any study on the basis of its cultural or geographic origin. Evidence 
    in support of a proposed health claim, however, will attain value in 
    direct proportion to the significance in the U.S. population of the 
    effects of the substance in question on the disease or health-related 
    condition addressed by the claim (see Sec. 101.14(b)(1)). Also, the 
    agency advises that it will consider ethnobotanical and other 
    traditional usage information. However, the agency points out that 
    under Sec. 101.14(c), the evidence must provide the basis for 
    significant scientific agreement that the claim is valid.
    
    D. General Labeling Requirements
    
        In the health claims final rule, FDA established a number of 
    general requirements for health claims for food in conventional food 
    form in Sec. 101.14(d) to ensure that consumers are provided with valid 
    and reliable information about the value that ingestion (or reduced 
    ingestion) of a particular substance, as part of a total dietary 
    pattern, may have in affecting certain diseases or health-related 
    conditions.
        In the dietary supplement health claims proposal, the agency 
    proposed that dietary supplements be subject to the same general 
    requirements that it has established for food in conventional food form 
    in Sec. 101.14(d). The agency advised that specific references to 
    dietary supplements in Sec. 101.14(d) are not necessary because FDA's 
    revision of Sec. 101.14(a)(2), the definition of the term 
    ``substance,'' to include components of dietary supplements will link 
    dietary supplements to the health claim for which Sec. 101.14(d) 
    prescribes general requirements.
    1. FDA Authorization of Valid Claims
        Section 101.14(d)(1) provides that when FDA determines that a 
    health claim is valid, the agency will propose a regulation in Subpart 
    E of Part 101 to authorize the use of the claim. Further, the provision 
    states that if the claim pertains to a substance not provided for in 
    Sec. 101.9, FDA will propose to amend that regulation to include 
    declaration of the substance. To ensure that the provisions established 
    in Sec. 101.14(d)(1) apply equally to all forms of dietary supplements, 
    the agency proposed in the dietary supplement proposal to revise 
    Sec. 101.14(d)(1) to reference, in addition to Sec. 101.9, the 
    provisions of Sec. 101.36 (21 CFR 101.36), which establish requirements 
    for the nutrition labeling of dietary supplements of vitamins and 
    minerals.
        FDA received no comments requesting changes in this aspect of the 
    proposal. Therefore, the agency is adopting this section as proposed.
    2. General Requirements
        Section 101.14(d)(2) requires that health claims on foods in 
    conventional food form: (1) Be consistent with the specific authorizing 
    regulation for the claim; (2) be limited to describing the value that 
    ingestion (or reduced ingestion) of the substance, as part of a total 
    dietary pattern, may have on a particular disease or health-related 
    condition; (3) be complete, truthful, and not misleading; (4) contain 
    all required information for that claim in one place without other 
    intervening material (except that the principal display panel (PDP) of 
    the label or labeling may bear a reference statement such as ``See 
    attached pamphlet for information about calcium and osteoporosis,'' 
    with the entire claim appearing elsewhere on the other labeling); and 
    (5) enable the public to comprehend the information provided and to 
    understand the relative significance of such information in the context 
    of a total daily diet. If the claim is about the effects of consuming 
    the substance at decreased dietary levels, the level of the substance 
    in the food must be sufficiently low to justify the claim. For example, 
    if a definition for use of the term ``low'' has been established for 
    that substance, the substance must be present at a level that meets the 
    requirements for use of that term, unless a specific alternative level 
    has been established for the substance in the authorizing regulation. 
    If the claim is about the effects of consuming the substance at other 
    than decreased dietary levels, the level of the substance in the food 
    must be sufficiently high and in an appropriate form to justify the 
    claim. For example, if a definition for use of the term ``high'' for 
    that substance has been established, the substance must be present at a 
    level that meets the requirements for use of that term, unless a 
    specific alternative level has been established for the substance in 
    the authorizing regulation. (See Sec. 101.14(d)(2)(vii)(A) for 
    additional requirements where the food meets the ``high'' or ``low'' 
    requirements based on its reference amount customarily consumed and the 
    labeled serving size differs from that amount. See 
    Sec. 101.14(d)(2)(vii)(B) for guidance about how a food can meet the 
    ``high'' and ``low'' requirements where the food is sold in a 
    restaurant.)
        In the dietary supplement health claims proposal, FDA proposed that 
    dietary supplements be subject to these requirements to ensure that 
    consumers are provided with scientifically valid, nonmisleading, and 
    reliable information about the value that ingestion of the particular 
    substance in the dietary supplement may have in affecting a disease or 
    health-related condition.
        21. One comment stated that FDA should mandate that dietary 
    supplements bear health claims for which they are eligible in order to 
    promote public awareness of the benefits associated with those 
    supplements.
        FDA does not believe that it is appropriate to adopt a general 
    policy requiring the inclusion of health claims on the labels of all 
    foods eligible to bear them. The agency notes that while the 1990 
    amendments provide for the appearance of health claims on the labels of 
    foods qualified to bear them, they do not make the appearance of those 
    claims mandatory.
        FDA believes that many manufacturers will choose to include health 
    claims on the labels of qualified foods because of the marketing 
    benefit offered by their appearance. Because health claims provide 
    information regarding the benefits associated with the increased or 
    decreased dietary intake of various substances in the product rather 
    than information regarding the particular product itself, consumers 
    will be made aware of the benefits of consuming other foods that do or 
    do not contain the particular substance, even if a particular food 
    product does not itself bear the health claim.
        22. One comment asserted that FDA should require manufacturers who 
    elect to craft their own health claims, rather than to use the model 
    claim verbatim, to secure agency approval for their claims with respect 
    to understandability.
        FDA disagrees with this comment. Section 3(b)(1)(A)(vii) of the 
    1990 amendments prohibits FDA from requiring persons to secure agency 
    approval before placing a health claim on a product, provided that the 
    claim is in compliance with the applicable regulation authorizing the 
    health claim. The House Report (Ref. 1) states that this section 
    ``makes it clear that the regulations will not require premarket review 
    of each claim; they will only require that the claim be consistent with 
    the terms and requirements of the regulations.'' The agency believes 
    that it is possible to paraphrase a model health claim while remaining 
    consistent with the terms and requirements of the regulations 
    permitting that claim. This position is similar to agency policy that 
    permits the use of terminology other than that established in a final 
    OTC drug monograph in labeling of an OTC drug product to describe 
    indications for use (51 FR 16258, May 1, 1986). Consistent with that 
    policy for OTC drug labeling, the agency believes that the goal of 
    ensuring scientifically valid, truthful, and nonmisleading labeling 
    without inhibiting effective consumer communication does not require 
    exclusive use of language in a model health claim. The model language 
    along with other requirements for a claim will, nevertheless, provide 
    the standard for measuring the accuracy of alternative language 
    developed by food manufacturers for their products because FDA has 
    included all mandatory labeling elements of a health claim in the model 
    claim. Of course, manufacturers should recognize that a health claim 
    that fails to convey all the mandatory elements of the claim will 
    subject a product to regulatory action.
    3. Nutrition Labeling
        Section 101.14(d)(3) requires that health claims on foods in 
    conventional food form must bear nutrition labeling in accordance with 
    Sec.  101.9 and 101.10 (21 CFR 101.9 and 101.10). In the dietary 
    supplement health claims proposal, the agency proposed to revise 
    Sec. 101.14(d) to reference Sec. 101.36 (21 CFR 101.36), in addition to 
    Sec.  101.9 and 101.10. In response to section 403(q)(5)(F) of the act 
    (formerly section 403(q)(5)(E)), Sec. 101.36 establishes requirements 
    for the nutrition labeling of dietary supplements of vitamins and 
    minerals.
        FDA received no comments requesting changes in this aspect of the 
    proposal. Therefore, the agency is adopting this section as proposed.
    
    E. Prohibited Health Claims
    
        In Sec. 101.14(e) of the health claims final rule, FDA established, 
    for foods in conventional food form, a number of situations where 
    health claims are prohibited. In that paragraph, FDA provides that a 
    health claim may not be made on the label or in the labeling of a food 
    unless: (1) The claim is specifically provided for in authorizing 
    regulations in Subpart E of 21 CFR part 101; (2) the claim conforms to 
    all general provisions of Sec. 101.14, as well as to all specific 
    provisions in the authorizing regulation; (3) none of the disqualifying 
    levels identified in Sec. 101.14(a)(5) is exceeded in the food, unless 
    specific alternative levels have been established for the substance in 
    the authorizing regulation, and the labeling bears a statement that 
    complies with Sec. 101.13(h) highlighting the nutrient that exceeds the 
    disqualifying level; (4) no substance is present at an inappropriate 
    level as determined in the specific provision authorizing the claim in 
    Subpart E of 21 CFR part 101; (5) the label does not represent or 
    purport that the food is for infants and toddlers less than 2 years of 
    age except if the claim is specifically provided for in Subpart E of 21 
    CFR part 101; and (6) except for dietary supplements, the food contains 
    10 percent or more of the RDI or Daily Reference Value (DRV) for 
    vitamin A, vitamin C, iron, calcium, protein, or fiber before any 
    nutrient addition.
        In the dietary supplement health claims proposal, the agency 
    proposed that dietary supplements be subject to the general 
    prohibitions that have been established for foods in conventional food 
    form in Sec. 101.14(e). The agency tentatively concluded that this 
    action was appropriate because these prohibitions: (1) Reflect the 
    statutory restriction in section 403(r)(1)(B) of the act that requires 
    that health claims be made in accordance with the provisions of section 
    403(r)(5)(D) for dietary supplements; (2) ensure that inappropriate, 
    unsubstantiated, and fraudulent health claims are not made; and (3) 
    reduce the potential for consumer confusion when confronted with a 
    situation in which there would be health claims for substances when 
    they are present in dietary supplements but not when they are present 
    in foods in conventional food form. The agency advised that specific 
    references to dietary supplements in Sec. 101.14(e) generally are not 
    necessary because FDA's proposed revision in Sec. 101.14(a)(2) of the 
    definition of the term ``substance'' to include components of dietary 
    supplements will bring dietary supplements within the coverage of 
    Sec. 101.14(e).
        FDA did propose, however, to include a reference to dietary 
    supplements in the introductory sentence of paragraph (e) to clarify 
    that dietary supplements may be food. Specifically, FDA proposed to 
    insert the phrase ``regardless of whether the food is in conventional 
    food form or dietary supplement form'' into that sentence to make clear 
    that no expressed or implied health claims may be made on the label or 
    in labeling of any food unless the conditions in that paragraph are 
    met.
    1. Claims Not Authorized By FDA
        Section 101.14(e)(1) and (e)(2) prohibit the use on a food label or 
    in food labeling of any claim that expressly or by implication 
    characterizes the relationship of any substance to a disease or health-
    related condition unless: (1) The claim is specifically provided for in 
    Part 101, Subpart E--Specific Requirements for Health Claims; and (2) 
    the claim conforms to all general provisions of Sec. 101.14, as well as 
    to all specific provisions in the appropriate section in subpart E of 
    21 CFR part 101.
        23. A number of comments asserted that the marketplace is currently 
    saturated with hundreds of false and misleading claims, ranging from 
    rather innocuous statements to blatant claims concerning the treatment 
    of cancer, AIDS, heart disease, asthma, high blood pressure, 
    Alzheimer's disease, diabetes, and other diseases and health-related 
    conditions. One of these comments urged FDA to regulate as implied 
    health claims those brand names that imply that a product is useful in 
    preventing particular diseases. The comment asserted that an implied 
    health claim can be made by the inclusion of the name of a disease in a 
    brand name, as well as by label statements that slant the meaning of a 
    brand name toward disease prevention.
        FDA realizes there are a number of misleading claims in use on 
    products. The agency reviews these claims as part of its regular 
    enforcement activities and takes action against such claims based on 
    such factors as the public health significance of the claim, how 
    clearly it violates the act, and the availability of agency resources.
        24. A number of comments stated that manufacturers should be 
    allowed to include information on the traditional use of various 
    supplements on their labels. These comments noted that many other 
    countries allow supplement labels to indicate traditional uses of the 
    product, provided that the level of evidence supporting such use is 
    accurately represented. Many comments asserted that statements 
    concerning the safe usage of dietary supplements should not be 
    considered a health claim. The comments maintained that the exclusion 
    of such information from food labeling would endanger the public 
    health.
        Dietary supplements that bear labeling that expressly or by 
    implication characterizes the relationship of any substance to a 
    disease or health-related condition will be subject to the provisions 
    of section 403(r) of the act. However, if the claim reveals that the 
    product is intended to be used in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, 
    treatment, or prevention of a disease, as would likely be the situation 
    where the product is presented as an alternative to conventional drug 
    therapy, the product, like any other product that does so, is a drug 
    under section 201(g)(1)(B) of the act and subject to the requirements 
    for drugs in Chapter V of the act.
        However, supplement manufacturers, like all other food 
    manufacturers, are welcome to submit health claim petitions that 
    establish the validity of claims that characterize the relationship of 
    a substance to a disease or a health-related condition in a manner that 
    is appropriate for a food. (See section III.G. of this document.) Any 
    such petition that shows that the preliminary requirements in 
    Sec. 101.14(b) and the scientific standard for a health claim in 
    Sec. 101.14(c) are met will provide the basis for a proposal to 
    authorize a claim in accordance with section 403(r)(4)(A)(i) of the 
    act.
        In addition, FDA advises manufacturers of dietary supplements that 
    where a claim does not include one or both of the basic elements of a 
    health claim, it generally constitutes dietary guidance that may be 
    provided on the label or in labeling, so long as it is presented in a 
    truthful and nonmisleading manner.
        25. One comment urged that FDA permit the appearance of preliminary 
    health claims on the labeling of a product other than its label. The 
    comment maintained that the 1990 amendments draw a clear distinction 
    between a product label and its labeling and noted that labeling has 
    much more room in which a manufacturer may sufficiently explain the 
    current state of scientific evidence regarding a preliminary claim.
        FDA disagrees with this comment. Section 403(r)(1) of the act 
    clearly prohibits the appearance of health claims that are not made in 
    accordance with FDA regulations and that appear ``in the label or 
    labeling  of the food (emphasis added).'' The agency's objections to 
    preliminary claims are fully discussed in this preamble in its response 
    to comment 4.
    2. Additional Limits on Health Claims
        In the health claims final rule (58 FR 2478 at 2534), FDA adopted 
    new Sec. 101.14(e)(6) to require consistency with dietary guidelines by 
    prohibiting health claims unless the food contains 10 percent or more 
    of the RDI or DRV for vitamin A, vitamin C, iron, calcium, protein, or 
    fiber per reference amount customarily consumed prior to any nutrient 
    addition. (A complete discussion of why these specific criteria were 
    selected appears in the preamble of that document (see 58 FR 2478 at 
    2521 through 2522).) This provision stresses the importance of 
    selecting foods so that dietary sources of calories are coupled with 
    sources of nutrients. This approach incorporates established levels of 
    significance for nutrients in food and is based on the amounts in foods 
    of certain nutrients required to be listed on the label as part of 
    mandatory nutrition labeling. As such, this approach applies to food in 
    conventional food form.
        FDA specifically exempted dietary supplements from this 
    requirement. Such supplements are intended only to provide nutritive 
    value to the daily diet, and they make no pretense of serving as 
    substitutes for conventional food. (Nutrient supplements in 
    conventional food form are, however, intended to serve as substitutes 
    for conventional food.) As a result, it would not be logical to hold 
    such products to criteria designed to ensure consistency with dietary 
    guidelines for conventional food. A dietary supplement that meets the 
    qualifying criterion in Sec. 101.14(d)(2)(vii) and that does not 
    contain a nutrient at a disqualifying level specified in 
    Sec. 101.14(a)(5) possesses nutritive value for a health claim 
    irrespective of whether or not it may also provide calories. 
    Accordingly, in the dietary supplement health claims proposal, FDA did 
    not propose to make any change in the exemption for dietary supplements 
    from the provisions of Sec. 101.14(e)(6). For consistency with the 
    proposed definition of the term ``dietary supplement,'' however, FDA 
    proposed to revise the wording for this exemption to delete the phrase 
    ``not in conventional food form'' because the definition of ``dietary 
    supplement'' states that such foods are not in conventional food form.
        FDA received no comments requesting changes in this aspect of the 
    proposal. Therefore, the agency is adopting this section as proposed.
    
    F. Applicability
    
        In the health claims final rule, FDA established a provision in 
    Sec. 101.14(g) stating that the requirements for health claims in 
    Sec. 101.14 apply to foods intended for human consumption that are 
    offered for sale. In the dietary supplement proposal, FDA proposed that 
    dietary supplements also be covered by Sec. 101.14(g). FDA stated that 
    it had tentatively concluded that a reference to dietary supplements 
    was appropriate in paragraph (g) to clarify that dietary supplements 
    can be food. Specifically, FDA proposed to revise paragraph (g) as 
    follows:
        Applicability. The requirements of this section apply to foods 
    intended for human consumption that are offered for sale, regardless 
    of whether the foods are in conventional food form or dietary 
    supplement form.
        26. One comment asserted that FDA should allow health claims 
    authorized for use on dietary supplements to also appear on OTC drug 
    products that provide ``high'' levels of a particular nutrient, e.g., 
    calcium-osteoporosis claims on calcium carbonate antacid tablets.
        FDA received a comment similar to this one on the health claims 
    proposal. This comment provides no basis for the agency to provide a 
    different response to this comment than it did in the health claims 
    final rule.
        As explained in the preamble of the health claims final rule (58 FR 
    2478 at 2500), multiple use products that are both foods and drugs 
    present a difficult set of competing concerns for the agency. Such 
    products are likely to be both an OTC drug and a dietary supplement.
        Most OTC drug products are developed to address some type of acute 
    medical problem that is expected to be of short duration. If the 
    problem persists, it is important that the person with the problem know 
    that it may be more severe than he or she otherwise thought, and that 
    he or she should seek medical attention. Labeling on such products, 
    therefore, includes instructions to use the product for a limited 
    period of time and, if the problem persists, to seek medical 
    intervention. Thus, the time limits on use of the product are important 
    to the health of the users.
        Dietary supplements, on the other hand, are developed for inclusion 
    in a daily diet at levels that are consistent with dietary use and may 
    often be consumed throughout most of a person's lifetime. Labeling on 
    dietary supplements contains no instructions for seeking medical 
    intervention or for limiting the duration of consumption of the 
    supplement. Rather, under the new regulations, dietary supplements will 
    be able to bear nutrient content and health claims, which focus the 
    consumer's attention on the advantages that consuming the product will 
    have in helping the consumer to maintain a healthy diet. Moreover, 
    where the supplement bears a health claim, the claim will contain 
    information about how long-term ingestion of the supplement may promote 
    health.
        Where dietary levels and therapeutic levels differ (as is generally 
    the case and is in fact the case with antacids and calcium 
    supplements), an apparent conflict is created when both food and drug 
    labeling appear on the same product. In the case of the drug labeling, 
    consumers are given directions for use that involve high consumption 
    during a limited time period. In the case of the food labeling, 
    consumers are given directions for lower consumption with no time 
    constraints. Even though label instructions may identify those 
    directions for food and drug use in separate locations, FDA is 
    concerned that consumers will incorrectly assume that the therapeutic 
    dosage is appropriate for dietary use, and that the directions for food 
    use will undercut the warning in the drug labeling to seek medical care 
    if the condition persists. Where the labeling is not properly followed, 
    significant adverse consequences may result.
        The agency knows of no broad approach that it can use to harmonize 
    a nutrient content claim or a health claim with drug labeling. A drug 
    that is labeled with instructions for use that both limit and do not 
    limit consumption would be misbranded under section 502(a) of the act 
    (21 U.S.C. 352(a)) if it failed to contain a material fact--that is, 
    how to reconcile these conflicting instructions.
        However, FDA does not believe that it would be appropriate to 
    preclude such claims under all circumstances. Such claims may be 
    permissible if a firm can demonstrate that dual claims can be made in a 
    manner that will neither misbrand the product nor create a safety 
    problem. The agency suggests that anyone desiring to make a health 
    claim or a nutrient content claim that complies with section 403(r) of 
    the act on a product that is both a food and a drug contact the Center 
    for Drug Evaluation and Research, OTC Compliance Branch (HFD-312), FDA, 
    7500 Standish Pl., Rockville, MD 20855, to discuss whether it would be 
    possible to put such a claim on the product and still comply with the 
    drug provisions of the act.
    
    G. Petitions
    
        27. A number of comments urged FDA to streamline its procedures for 
    approving health claims in order that dietary supplement manufacturers 
    may include the most current, reliable information on their products. 
    The comments stated that the inclusion of such information is 
    critically important to dietary supplements because, unlike foods in 
    conventional food form, they are consumed only for the health benefits 
    associated with them. The comments specifically proposed that FDA add 
    the following paragraphs to Sec. 101.70(j):
        (4)  Final Rule. FDA will, within 120 days of the date of 
    publication of the proposed rule, issue a final rule authorizing or 
    prohibiting the requested use of the health claim.
        (5)  Expedited Action on certain petitions. If FDA determines 
    during its initial review of the petition that it accurately 
    represents the recommendations of any agency or department of the 
    U.S. Government with public health responsibilities, or of any other 
    public health organization that is recognized as a credible source 
    of information on diet and health, FDA will publish a proposed rule 
    authorizing the requested use of the claim no later than 60 days 
    from the date of receipt of the petition and will issue a final rule 
    no later than 60 days from the date of publication of the proposed 
    rule.
        The comments maintained that new provision in paragraph (j)(4) 
    would correct an obvious oversight in the existing regulations, i.e., 
    the establishment of a firm deadline for a proposed rule but no firm 
    deadline for a final rule. The comments also contended that paragraph 
    (j)(5) is necessary to address FDA's failure to act promptly to approve 
    claims that are based on the recommendations of public health 
    authorities, such as its failure to approve a health claim for folic 
    acid in accord with the recommendations of PHS agencies.
        FDA advises that its failure to specify in Sec. 101.70(j) a 
    deadline for the publication of a final rule regarding the use of a 
    proposed health claim was not an oversight. Section 403(r)(4)(A)(i) 
    does not require that the agency adhere to any deadline for the 
    publication of a final rule. While FDA could establish such a timeframe 
    by regulation, it does not believe that the adoption of such a 
    requirement would be prudent. The comment period following the 
    publication of proposed rules is a critical step in determining whether 
    a proposed regulation is appropriate for adoption. In the instance of 
    health claim regulations, significant information concerning the 
    validity of the substance-disease relationship underlying the proposed 
    health claim may be submitted by interested parties during the comment 
    period. Also, the comment period may bring to light a previously 
    unforeseen potential for the use of a health claim, if adopted without 
    modification, to be misleading to consumers or to create serious 
    potential threats to the public health. The agency has no way to 
    guarantee that it will be able to adequately resolve such problems 
    within the suggested timeframe. In such instances, if faced with a 
    specific timeframe, FDA would be forced to either deny an otherwise 
    valid health claim petition, or to approve it without erecting the 
    regulatory framework that it believes necessary to ensure that the 
    public health is safeguarded. Therefore, FDA is not adopting the 
    suggested time limit on the issuance of a final rule. However, the 
    agency advises that it committed to issuing final rules on health claim 
    petitions as quickly as possible consistent with the issues presented 
    and the agency's available resources.
        With respect to suggestions for shorter timeframes for certain 
    petitions, FDA advises that the agency's ability to meet timeframes is 
    influenced by many factors, such as work priorities and availability of 
    personnel. FDA considers the statutory timeframes for assessing the 
    validity of health claims and for issuing a proposed regulation to be 
    extremely short, given the need to evaluate the totality of available 
    scientific evidence on a substance and a disease or a health-related 
    condition. Given the agency's limited resources, it would not be 
    practicable to shorten these timeframes further. However, FDA points 
    out that although action on petitions for most claims will require 
    virtually all of the time provided by the statutory timeframes, nothing 
    would prohibit the agency from acting in less time than the timeframes 
    provide if it is possible to do so. Thus, it is likely that a petition 
    for a claim on a well-accepted substance/disease relationship would be 
    reviewed more expeditiously than one for which scientific agreement is 
    not as clear.
        28. A few comments urged FDA to consider the limited label space 
    available on many dietary supplements in developing model health 
    claims. The comments stated that concise model claims will provide 
    guidance to manufacturers on how to convey health claims in succinct 
    statements that comply with all of FDA's requirements and will thus 
    help ensure that the health claims presented to consumers are clear and 
    comprehensible.
        FDA realizes that there is a limit to the amount of information 
    that can be presented on a food label. However, the agency believes 
    that it must ensure that consumers understand that factors other than 
    dietary intake of the nutrient may bear on the substance-disease 
    relationship. Given the imperative of ensuring consumer understanding 
    of a message that must be presented in a very limited space, the agency 
    is faced with the difficult task of determining what information is 
    necessary in a claim, and what information is not. FDA believes that 
    its regulations in subpart E of 21 CFR part 101 represent an acceptable 
    balance between the consumer's right to understand the full context of 
    the claim and the manufacturer's concern over claim length. By 
    delineating the information that is mandatory and optional in a claim, 
    FDA is relieving manufacturers from having to include information that 
    is of tangential importance but ensuring that those who wish to make a 
    claim do so in a manner that provides a useful and understandable 
    message to consumers. FDA advises that it will take a similar approach 
    when providing model health claims in the future. FDA also notes that 
    manufacturers who are not satisfied with the model claim are free to 
    develop their own versions of the claim, provided that those versions 
    include all of the information required by the authorizing regulation.
        29. Several comments raised the issue of product-specific health 
    claims by asserting that many manufacturers will be dissuaded from 
    undertaking the scientific studies and other investments necessary to 
    obtain approval of new health claims petitions by the fact that 
    approved health claims will be allowed for use on all qualifying 
    products. However, a number of comments stressed that in a health 
    claim, the role of the total diet should be emphasized rather than the 
    role of a specific food in risk reduction.
        FDA advises that section 403(r)(1)(B) of the act pertains to a 
    claim about the relationship between a nutrient and a disease or 
    health-related condition, rather than about particular food product and 
    such a condition. While the agency has used the term ``substance'' in 
    lieu of the word ``nutrient'' and has said that a ``substance'' can be 
    a food, in doing so the agency was only trying to cover circumstances 
    such as those presented by fruits, vegetables, and grain products in 
    which it was not possible to identify the specific nutrient in a broad 
    class of foods that was having the observed effect on the risk of 
    disease. FDA was not thereby including formulated products as possible 
    subjects of health claims. Such products are formulated to include 
    particular substances because of the nutritional effects of those 
    substances. Thus, a health claim for such a product would appropriately 
    be about the substance in the formulated product and not about the 
    product itself.
        In addition, section 403(r)(3)(B)(iii) of the act directs the 
    agency to require that health claims enable the public to understand 
    the information in the context of the total daily diet. As explained 
    above, FDA finds that to effect Congress' intent in passing the 1990 
    amendments, the same requirement should apply to health claims made on 
    dietary supplements. FDA believes that a claim that refers specifically 
    to the effects on a disease or health-related condition resulting from 
    the consumption of a certain brand name of product would unduly 
    emphasize the importance of that product and not the importance of the 
    total daily diet. Also, such claims could imply that other brands of 
    the same food, as well as other foods containing the substance that is 
    the subject of the claim, might not have the same effect on the disease 
    or health-related condition and thus would be misleading under section 
    403(a) of the act. Accordingly, the agency finds that it is not 
    appropriate to approve product-specific health claims.
        30. One comment suggested that FDA provide regular monthly or 
    quarterly reports concerning newly approved health claim petitions for 
    display in the supplement section of stores. The comment maintained 
    that such a list distributed by FDA would increase consumer confidence 
    in the claims when they appear on supplement labels.
        Although FDA recognizes that there could be benefits to consumers 
    from such reports, the agency simply does not have the resources to 
    provide the reports on an ongoing basis. However, FDA expects that 
    trade associations and other interested parties will provide 
    information to firms that will ultimately be passed on to consumers.
    
    IV. Constitutional Issues
    
    A. First Amendment
    
    1. General
        31. Several comments raised concerns that the regulations violate 
    the First Amendment. Comments cautioned that the regulations would be 
    unconstitutional if they limited the dissemination of scientific 
    opinion or prevented scientifically valid, well-balanced information 
    from reaching the public.
        In the final rule on health claims for foods in conventional food 
    form, 58 FR 2478 at 2524 through 2528 (January 6, 1993), the agency 
    addressed in detail the First Amendment implications of its regulation 
    of health claims on the food label and in food labeling. The agency 
    concluded that its regulations, and the act as amended by the 1990 
    amendments, do not violate the First Amendment. FDA considers its 
    earlier analysis to be relevant to the present rulemaking and 
    incorporates it into this document. The agency notes that none of the 
    comments submitted on the proposed rule on health claims for dietary 
    supplements disputed the agency's earlier discussion, and no comments 
    argued that subsequent court decisions have called the agency's 
    conclusions into question.
        FDA disagrees with the comments that asserted that these 
    regulations unconstitutionally suppress scientific opinion. The 
    regulations address what may appear in labeling; they do not affect any 
    other means of disseminating information. Indeed, far from limiting the 
    dispersal of scientific information, as stated above, these 
    regulations, which implement the 1990 amendments to the act, permit 
    more information to appear on the label than the act allowed before its 
    amendment.
        The agency does not agree with the comments' implication that the 
    Constitution requires a more lenient standard of scientific validity 
    than that codified in Sec. 101.14(c). FDA has a strong interest in 
    ensuring that the information that appears on the food label is 
    scientifically valid and believes that the standard it has adopted best 
    furthers that interest. When FDA seeks to ensure that food is not 
    misbranded, it may place restrictions on label contents. See SEC v. 
    Wall Street Publishing Institute, 851 F.2d 365, 373 (D.C. Cir. 1988), 
    cert. denied, 489 U.S. 1066 (1989); American Frozen Food Institute v. 
    Mathews, 413 F. Supp. 548, 555 (D.D.C. 1976), aff'd, 555 F.2d 1059 
    (D.C. Cir. 1977). Contrary to the view of the comments, ``the First 
    Amendment does not guarantee the right to employ every conceivable 
    method of communication at all times and in all places'' (Members of 
    City Council v. Taxpayers for Vincent, 466 U.S. 789, 812 (1984)). 
    Indeed, ``Freedom of Speech does not include the freedom to violate the 
    labeling provisions of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act.'' 
    (United States v. Articles of Food * * * Clover Club Potato Chips, 67 
    F.R.D. 419, 424 (D. Idaho 1975)).
    2. Pure Speech
        31a. One comment asserted that health claims are not commercial in 
    nature and are entitled to full First Amendment protection. This 
    comment described health claims as typically being mere recitations of 
    scientific findings made by independent medical authorities and backed 
    by substantial agreement in the medical community. The comment asserted 
    that the proposed regulations reach ``pure scientific speech'' placed 
    on labels and in product advertisements and violate the First Amendment 
    by: (1) denying speakers channels of communication to present truthful, 
    nonmisleading health claims; (2) denying speakers the right to 
    communicate a particular kind of content; (3) discriminating against 
    certain speakers and forms of communication; and (4) denying the 
    constitutional rights of willing listeners, viewers, and readers.
        FDA disagrees with the comment. The agency notes initially that the 
    comment misinterprets the scope of the agency's action. These 
    regulations apply only to health claims made on the label or in 
    labeling of dietary supplements and not to advertising.
        The agency disagrees that health claims are entitled to full First 
    Amendment protection. The agency has stated that, although it does not 
    consider it necessary for its First Amendment analysis to determine 
    whether or not food labeling fits the definition of commercial speech, 
    labeling should certainly be considered closer to commercial speech 
    than to ``pure'' speech (58 FR 2478 at 2525 through 2526). It has also 
    stated that ``[l]abeling statements on food products intended for sale 
    would clearly appear in the context of a commercial transaction and 
    would `propose' such a transaction.'' (58 FR 2478 at 2527 (citing 
    Bolger v. Youngs Drug Products Corp., 463 U.S. 60, 66 (1983)); Central 
    Hudson Gas & Electric Corp. v. Public Service Commission, 447 U.S. 557, 
    562 n.5 (1980)); see also Adolph Coors v. Brady, 944 F.2d 1543, 1546 
    (10th Cir. 1991); United States v. General Nutrition, Inc., 638 F. 
    Supp. 556, 562 (W.D.N.Y. 1986). Commercial speech receives a lesser 
    degree of protection than noncommercial speech. (See, e.g., City of 
    Cincinnati v. Discovery Network, Inc., 113 S. Ct. 1505, 1513 (1993)). 
    The comment does not make a persuasive argument for considering health 
    claims on dietary supplement labels to be pure speech, and FDA is not 
    aware of any circumstance in which a court has considered such 
    information on the food label to be ``pure'' speech. Contrary to the 
    comment's assertion, information that is placed on the label by a 
    commercial enterprise in order to encourage the consumer to make a 
    purchase should not be considered protected speech simply because it 
    was generated by an independent source. (See, e.g., United States v. 
    Article of Drug * * * B-Complex Cholinos Capsules, 362 F.2d 923, 927 
    (3d Cir. 1966) (free speech was not implicated when third party's 
    statements were taken as evidence of manufacturer's intent); United 
    States v. Articles of Drug, 32 F.R.D. 32, 34-35 (S.D. Ill. 1963) (First 
    Amendment did not prohibit seizure of third party's book used as 
    labeling)).
        Although the agency disagrees that health claims should be 
    considered noncommercial speech, and although many of the cases cited 
    in the comment deal with fully protected speech rather than commercial 
    speech and thus do not provide a useful analytical framework for these 
    regulations, the agency will address the comment's arguments 
    individually.
        The agency disagrees that its action denies speakers channels of 
    communication. As discussed above, the agency has placed no limits on 
    the dissemination of scientific information but has acted to permit 
    certain information to appear on the label or in labeling of dietary 
    supplements. Adequate alternative channels remain for the dissemination 
    of scientific information. For example, regulation of the information 
    that may appear on the food label in no way affects the ability of a 
    scientist to publish experimental results in a journal. Moreover, any 
    interested person may petition for a health claim regulation.
        The agency disagrees that these regulations should be subjected to 
    the close scrutiny afforded restraints on the content of pure speech. 
    Of the cases cited by the comment to advance this argument, one is 
    particularly instructive. In Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. v. FCC, 
    the court declined to apply strict scrutiny to the ``must-carry'' 
    provisions of the 1992 Cable Act, applying instead the ``interest-
    balancing traditionally applied to content-neutral speech regulation or 
    legislation ostensibly unrelated to expression that is discovered to 
    impose incidental burdens on speech.'' 819 F. Supp. 32, 39 (D.D.C. 
    1993), prob. juris. noted, 114 S. Ct. 38 (1993). In passing the Cable 
    Act, ``Congress employed its regulatory powers over the economy to 
    impose order upon a market in dysfunction, but a market in a commercial 
    commodity nevertheless; not a market in speech'' (Id. at 40). 
    Similarly, with the 1990 amendments Congress sought to bring order to 
    the food market. (See, e.g., 136 Congressional Record S16611 (October 
    24, 1990) (statement of Sen. Hatch) (``It is up to us to make order out 
    of chaos in the regulation of food * * *.''); 136 Congressional Record 
    H12953 (October 26, 1990) (statement of Rep. Waxman) (``[T]he bill will 
    once and for all settle the confusion surrounding health claims.'')). 
    As discussed in the final rule on health claims for foods in 
    conventional food form, the case law establishes that FDA's power to 
    regulate the food label derives from its broad regulatory powers over 
    food (58 FR 2525). As in Turner, these regulations are valid under the 
    limited scrutiny that has been afforded restrictions on speech under 
    extensive regulatory schemes involving areas of economic activity (Id).
        The comment argued that the regulations are impermissibly 
    discriminatory because they require government regulators to exercise 
    judgment based on subjective line-drawing, guided not by rational 
    principles of law and science but by the will of the censorship 
    authority. FDA disagrees. The agency has carefully articulated the 
    appropriate scientific standard that it will apply to proposed health 
    claims. Unlike the ordinance at issue in Forsyth County v. Nationalist 
    Movement, cited by the comment, the decision whether to authorize a 
    health claim is not left to the agency's whim but is based on objective 
    factors. 112 S. Ct. 2395, 2403 (1992). In Forsyth, the county 
    administrator's exercise of discretion to vary the fee for assembling 
    or parading was not reviewable and did not require an explanation (Id). 
    FDA's procedure for evaluating a proposed health claim, including use 
    of notice and comment rulemaking, presents a far different situation, 
    and one that does not offend the Constitution.
        Contrary to the comment's assertion, the fact that FDA does not 
    presume to prohibit the publication of health claims in the popular 
    media does not show an ``arbitrary predilection to enforce [the] law 
    against particular speakers and forum owners rather than others.'' FDA 
    has no interest in regulating the dissemination of scientific 
    information in the popular media and has no authority to do so. Rather, 
    its strong interest is in ensuring that health claims made in labeling, 
    on which consumers are likely to rely when making purchasing decisions, 
    are truthful, not misleading, and scientifically valid. The agency's 
    action contrasts with the categorical ban on commercial newsracks 
    struck down in City of Cincinnati v. Discovery Network, Inc., 113 S. 
    Ct. 1505. In that case, the Supreme Court held that the restriction, 
    which was intended to advance Cincinnati's interest in safety and 
    esthetics, overemphasized the distinction between commercial and 
    noncommercial speech by prohibiting only newsracks holding commercial 
    handbills and not those holding ordinary newspapers (Id. at 1514). The 
    city thus discriminated against a use of newsracks that was no more 
    harmful to safety and esthetics than the use it permitted (Id. at 
    1511). On the other hand, FDA's regulation of health claims in labeling 
    bears a specific relationship to the interests the agency has asserted, 
    because it is directed specifically at ensuring the reliability and 
    validity of these claims (see id. at 1514.) Contrary to the comment's 
    assertion, the limited scope of FDA's regulations--i.e., food 
    labeling--does not amount to discrimination.
        Finally, the agency disagrees that its regulations deny the 
    constitutional rights of willing listeners, viewers, and readers. 
    First, this argument overstates the impact of these regulations, which 
    will affect only the labeling of dietary supplements and not other 
    sources of information about these products. Second, these regulations 
    will actually advance consumers' First Amendment interest in obtaining 
    information on which to base a purchasing decision, ``by insuring that 
    the information is not false or deceptive'' (National Commission on Egg 
    Nutrition v. FTC, 570 F.2d 157, 162 (7th Cir. 1977), cert. denied, 439 
    U.S. 821 (1978)). ``The fact that health is involved enhances the 
    interests of both consumers and the public in being assured `that the 
    stream of commercial information flow clearly as well as freely''' (Id. 
    (citing Virginia State Board of Pharmacy v. Virginia Citizens Consumer 
    Council, 425 U.S. 748, 772 (1976)); see also American Home Products v. 
    FTC, 695 F.2d 681, 714 (3d Cir. 1982)).
    3. Commercial Speech
        31b. Two comments asserted that, if health claims on labels are 
    considered commercial speech, FDA's regulations violate the First 
    Amendment because they are more restrictive than necessary to achieve 
    the government's goals. One comment recognized that FDA has ``a great 
    interest in preventing false and misleading claims and in preventing 
    fraud in the marketplace,'' but argued that closing the door on 
    truthful, qualified claims that are based on significant scientific 
    evidence is not reasonably responsive to those interests. The other 
    comment asserted that the wholesale suppression of truthful, 
    nonmisleading speech carries with it the silencing of speech 
    indispensable to the health of the American people, and that the 
    agency's action not only lacks a rational relationship to the end 
    chosen, public health, but actually undercuts that goal by shrouding 
    the public in ignorance.
        FDA disagrees that these regulations, if considered under the 
    commercial speech doctrine, are unconstitutional. The final rule on 
    health claims for foods in conventional food form, 58 FR 2478 at 2526-
    2527 (January 6, 1993), contains an analysis of that regulation in 
    light of the four-part test set out in Central Hudson Gas & Electric 
    Corp. v. Public Service Commission, 447 U.S. 557, 563-564 (1980). That 
    discussion is equally applicable to the present rulemaking.  Central 
    Hudson states that commercial speech that is inherently misleading is 
    not protected and may be prohibited (Id.). Speech that is only 
    potentially misleading may be restricted, so long as the restrictions 
    directly advance a substantial governmental interest and are no more 
    extensive than necessary to serve that interest (Id. at 566).
        The comments do not dispute the government's substantial interest 
    in promoting public health by ensuring that consumers have access to 
    information about dietary supplements that is scientifically valid, 
    truthful, reliable, informative, and not misleading. (Indeed, one 
    comment stated that the government's interest is ``great.'') Rather, 
    the comments focus on the last two parts of the Central Hudson test: 
    whether the regulations directly advance the governmental interest, and 
    whether there is a reasonable fit between regulatory ends and means.
        FDA disagrees that its regulations will undercut its stated goals. 
    Rather, the regulations directly advance the governmental interest. The 
    regulations provide for FDA review of the relevant scientific evidence 
    on a proposed health claim before the agency decides whether to 
    authorize use of the claim. In this way, the regulations ensure that 
    health claims are scientifically valid and reliable, and that they will 
    not mislead consumers. At the same time, the regulatory scheme 
    encourages the provision of information to consumers that will enable 
    them to maintain healthful dietary practices. Thus, these regulations 
    advance the government's interest in a ``direct and material way'' 
    (Edenfield v. Fane, 113 S. Ct. 1792, 1798 (1993)).
        FDA also disagrees that these regulations are more extensive than 
    necessary to serve the government interest. Recently, the Supreme Court 
    stated that the ``commercial speech cases require a fit between the 
    restriction and the government interest that is not necessarily 
    perfect, but reasonable'' (United States v. Edge Broadcasting Co., 113 
    S. Ct. 2696, 2705 (1993) (citing Board of Trustees v. Fox, 492 U.S. 
    469, 480 (1989); Posadas de Puerto Rico Associates v. Tourism Co. of 
    Puerto Rico, 478 U.S. 328, 344 (1986))). In Edge, the Court upheld a 
    federal statute prohibiting the broadcast of lottery advertising by a 
    broadcaster licensed to a State that does not allow lotteries. Although 
    the law prevented a broadcaster in North Carolina, with a majority of 
    its listeners in Virginia, from airing nonmisleading advertisements for 
    Virginia's lottery, the Court had ``no doubt that the fit * * * was a 
    reasonable one.'' Edge, 113 S. Ct. at 2705. The Court stated that the 
    validity of a restriction should be judged ``by the relation it bears 
    to the general problem of accommodating the policies of both lottery 
    and nonlottery States, not by the extent to which it furthers the 
    Government's interest in an individual case.'' Id. (citing Ward v. Rock 
    Against Racism, 491 U.S. 781 (1989)). Moreover, once the government has 
    established a strong interest in adopting and enforcing rules of 
    conduct designed to protect the public, it is entitled to protect its 
    interest by applying a prophylactic rule to those circumstances 
    generally, Id. at 2706 (citing Ohralik v. Ohio State Bar Association, 
    436 U.S. 447, 464 (1978)).
        After considering alternate approaches, the agency has concluded 
    that the procedures and scientific standard set out in these 
    regulations best advance its stated interests under the act. (See 
    discussion supra.) As in Edge, the government has weighed competing 
    interests: the interest in making information available on the dietary 
    supplement label and in its labeling about the relationship between 
    nutritional substances and disease or health-related conditions, and 
    the interest in ensuring that the information provided is 
    scientifically valid, informative, and not misleading. As in Ohralik 
    and Edge, the agency is entitled to protect its interest by applying a 
    prophylactic rule to general circumstances, in this case by permitting 
    only health claims about substance-disease relationships that the 
    agency has determined are scientifically valid to appear in labeling. 
    See Edge, 113 S. Ct. at 2706.
        The means that FDA has chosen to further its substantial interest 
    are reasonable, ``in proportion to the interest served,'' and 
    ``narrowly tailored to achieve the desired objective.''  City of 
    Cincinnati v. Discovery Network, Inc., 113 S. Ct. at 1510 n.12 (quoting 
    Fox, 492 U.S. at 480). The regulations specifically target labeling 
    claims about relationships between substances and disease or health-
    related conditions. They are not intended to restrict the flow of 
    information to the public, but rather to ensure that the scientific 
    validity of information provided to consumers in the labeling of a 
    product has been established. Indeed, the regulations leave open a 
    broad range of other possible methods of communication.
    4. Chilling Effect
        31c. One comment asserted that an overbroad suppression of 
    scientific speech on communications media used by manufacturers creates 
    a pervasive chilling effect on their willingness (and that of the 
    scientists they employ) to communicate their findings for public and 
    professional consideration.
        The overbreadth doctrine is an exception to traditional rules of 
    standing and is applicable in First Amendment cases in order to ensure 
    that an overbroad statute does not chill the exercise of protected 
    rights. Leonardson v. City of E. Lansing, 896 F.2d 190, 195 (6th Cir. 
    1990)). The doctrine may apply to a regulation that, in all its 
    applications, directly restricts protected First Amendment activity and 
    is not narrowly tailored  Secretary of State of Maryland v. Joseph H. 
    Munson Co., 467 U.S. 947, 965 n.13 (1984). FDA disagrees that these 
    regulations are overbroad or that they will chill free speech. The 
    activity prohibited under the act and these regulations--marketing 
    dietary supplements bearing unapproved health claims in their 
    labeling--constitutes a ``core of easily identifiable and 
    constitutionally proscribable conduct,'' (467 U.S. at 965-966). 
    Labeling is defined in the act and easily identifiable. See 21 U.S.C. 
    321(m) (``The term labeling means all labels and other written, 
    printed, or graphic matter (1) upon any article or any of its 
    containers or wrappers, or (2) accompanying such article.''). Moreover, 
    courts have held that misbranding food is not protected under the First 
    Amendment. See, e.g., Kellogg Co. v. Mattox, 763 F. Supp. 1369, 1381 
    (N.D. Tex. 1991), aff'd sub nom. Kellogg Co. v. Morales, 940 F.2d 1530 
    (5th Cir. 1991); United States v. General Nutrition, Inc., 638 F. Supp. 
    556, 562 (W.D.N.Y. 1986); United States v. Articles of Food * * * 
    Clover Club Potato Chips, 67 F.R.D. 419, 424 (D. Idaho 1975). Finally, 
    as discussed above, the regulations are narrowly tailored to accomplish 
    the government's goals.
        In any event, it is doubtful that the overbreadth doctrine would 
    apply to these regulations, particularly if they are considered to 
    regulate commercial speech, because the overbreadth doctrine does not 
    apply to commercial speech. ``[C]ommercial speech is generally 
    considered less susceptible to the chilling effect of regulation than 
    other, more traditionally recognized forms of speech, such as political 
    discourse.''  Kraft, Inc. v. FTC, 970 F.2d 311, 321 (7th Cir. 1992), 
    cert. denied, 113 S. Ct. 1254 (1993).
    
    B. Fifth Amendment
    
        32. One comment asserted that the takings clause of the United 
    States Constitution provides protection to dietary supplement trade 
    names. It argued that Sec. 101.14 might proscribe certain trade names 
    that FDA has allowed to remain on the market for years. The comment 
    urged FDA to give more attention, under Executive Order 12630, to the 
    regulation's possible takings implications.
        When it issued its final regulations governing conventional foods 
    under the 1990 amendments, FDA fully discussed the takings implications 
    of those regulations. (See 58 FR at 2397 through 2400 and 2528 through 
    2529). This discussion, including the underlying takings analysis, is 
    incorporated herein. The agency concluded that there would be no 
    regulatory taking under the Fifth Amendment if a manufacturer is 
    required to alter its brand name when the brand name asserts by 
    implication a relationship between the presence or level of a substance 
    in the food and a disease or health-related condition, and that 
    relationship is not the subject of an approved health claim (58 FR at 
    2529). Because the agency conducted its analysis before passage of the 
    DS act, it fully took into account the regulations' impact on dietary 
    supplements. Although the comment stated that FDA must address the 
    issues raised by its regulations in light of Executive Order 12630, it 
    did not provide any additional information that the agency has not 
    already considered. Therefore, the agency concludes that it is not 
    necessary to address potential takings issues in any greater detail.
    
    V. Other Issues
    
        33. A few comments objected to the period of time provided for 
    public comment on the proposal, stating that it was too short. One of 
    these comments asserted that FDA had no reason to establish such a 
    short deadline other than to curtail public input on the proposed 
    regulations. Another of these comments requested that FDA extend the 
    period for public comment on the proposed regulations to give consumer 
    advocacy groups, health care professionals, and the scientific 
    community adequate time to prepare the information and opinions needed 
    to fairly resolve the issues associated with the proposal.
        As explained in the preamble of the proposals, the DS act requires 
    that final rules implementing the 1990 amendments with respect to 
    dietary supplements be issued by December 31, 1993. To meet this 
    statutory timeframe, FDA was forced to limit the comment period for the 
    proposed regulations to 60 days. Thus, the agency reaffirms that it is 
    unable to grant any extensions to the comment period.
        34. One comment requested that FDA clarify that the compliance date 
    is the date on which manufacturers of dietary supplements must begin to 
    label products in accordance with Sec. 101.14.
        FDA advises that the comment is correct. Section 10(a)(2) of the 
    1990 amendments specifically states that ``* * * section 403(r) of the 
    Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act * * * shall not apply to food 
    which was labeled before the effective date of the amendments * * * 
    [emphasis added].'' Accordingly, the effective date of the health 
    claims regulations for dietary supplements adopted by the agency under 
    section 403(r) refers to the date on which a dietary supplement is 
    labeled.
        35. A number of comments concerned the requirement in 
    Sec. 101.14(d)(2)(iv) that states that all claims must appear in one 
    place, in the same type size, without intervening material. The 
    comments addressed the exception in this provision that a short 
    reference statement may appear on the label, ``See ------------ for 
    information about the relationship between ------------ and ----------
    --,'' with the blanks filled in with references to the location of the 
    labeling on which the full claim appears, the name of the substance, 
    and the disease or health-related condition. The comment requested that 
    FDA allow graphic material constituting an implied health claim to 
    appear on the PDP without the accompanying referral statement or full 
    health claim, as long as the graphic material appeared in conjunction 
    with the full health claim elsewhere on the labeling. The comment 
    justified this request based on the lack of sufficient label space on 
    the PDP for the referral statement.
        FDA does not believe that it should make the requested revision in 
    Sec. 101.14(d)(2)(iv). In situations where graphic material constitutes 
    an implied health claim, and the reference statement is not present, 
    the graphic material on the labeling is in fact a shortened form of the 
    health claim. FDA explained in response to comment 69 in the health 
    claims final rule that shortened health claims are misleading because 
    they do not include facts that are material in light of the 
    representation that is made and that are necessary to understand the 
    claim in the context of the daily diet.
    
    IV. Impact Statements
    
    A. Economic Impact
    
        In its dietary supplement labeling proposals pertaining to health 
    claims, nutrition labeling, and nutrient content claims in the June 18, 
    1993 Federal Register (58 FR 33700, 33715, and 33731), FDA stated that 
    the proposed rules on the labeling of dietary supplements, taken as a 
    whole, would have associated costs of approximately $20 million. Thus, 
    the agency concluded that the proposed rules do not constitute a major 
    rule as defined by Executive Order 12291. In accordance with the 
    Regulatory Flexibility Act (Pub. L. 96-354), FDA explored whether the 
    proposed rules may have a significant impact on small businesses and 
    tentatively concluded that they do not.
        FDA has evaluated many comments that it received in response to its 
    economic impact analysis. Because the issues raised in the comments 
    relate to all three proposals, FDA has combined its discussion of these 
    comments and presented them in the final rule regarding the 
    establishment of the date of application published elsewhere in this 
    issue of the Federal Register.
        FDA has examined the economic implications of the final rules as 
    required by Executive Order 12866 and the Regulatory Flexibility Act 
    (Pub. L. 96-354). Executive Order 12866 directs agencies to assess all 
    costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, when 
    regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize 
    net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, and public 
    health and safety effects; distributive impacts; and equity). The 
    Regulatory Flexibility Act requires that the agency analyze the options 
    for regulatory relief for small businesses. FDA has concluded, based on 
    its review of the available data and comments, that these final rules 
    are not significant as that term is defined by Executive Order 12866. 
    Further, in accordance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act, the agency 
    certifies that these final rules will not have a significant impact on 
    a substantial number of small businesses.
    
    B. Environmental Impact
    
        The agency has previously considered the environmental effects of 
    this rule when it was part of the proposed rule pertaining to both 
    foods in conventional food form and dietary supplements (November 27, 
    1991 Federal Register (56 FR 60537 at 60562)). At that time, FDA 
    determined under Sec. 25.24(a)(8) and (11) that the proposed action was 
    of a type that does not individually or cumulatively have a significant 
    impact on the human environment. No new information or comments have 
    been received with respect to health claims for dietary supplements 
    that would affect the agency's previous determination that there is no 
    significant impact on the human environment, and that an environmental 
    impact statement is not required.
    
    C. Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        In the dietary supplement proposal of June 18, 1993 (58 FR 33700 at 
    33714), FDA announced that the agency had submitted to the Office of 
    Management and Budget (OMB) for its review the collection of 
    information requirements contained in proposed Sec. 101.70, for 
    petitions regarding the use of health claims in conjunction with food 
    labeling on dietary supplements. Also in that document, FDA published 
    its estimated annual collection of information burden for this 
    provision.
        None of the more than 1,200 comments received in response to the 
    dietary supplement proposal addressed the content of petitions under 
    the proposed health claim petition requirements. Thus, the agency's 
    estimate of the annual reporting and recordkeeping burden from the 
    health claim petition requirements contained in this final rule remains 
    unchanged from the estimate that it announced in June 1993.
        FDA has submitted copies of the final rule to OMB for its review of 
    these reporting requirements.
    
    V. References
    
        The following references have been placed on display in the Dockets 
    Management Branch (HFA-305), Food and Drug Administration, rm. 1-23, 
    12420 Parklawn Dr., Rockville, MD 20857, and may be seen by interested 
    persons between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through Friday.
        1. House of Representatives, House Report 101-538, ``Nutrition 
    Labeling and Education Act of 1990,'' June 13, 1990.
        1a. 136 Congressional Record--House H5843-5845, July 30, 1990.
        2. 136 Congressional Record--House, H12951-12955, October 26, 
    1990.
        3. 138 Congressional Record--House H12597 (October 8, 1992); 138 
    Congressional Record--Senate S17236 (October 7, 1992).
        4. 136 Congressional Record--Senate, S16607-16612, October 24, 
    1990.
        5. DHHS, PHS, ``The Surgeon General's Report on Nutrition and 
    Health,'' DHHS (PHS) Publication No. 88-50210 (GPO Stock No. 017-
    001-00465-1, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC), 1988.
        6. United States Pharmacopeia DI, ``NIACIN (Systemic),'' 9th 
    ed., 1989, Vol. IB, pp. 1737-1740.
        7. Centers for Disease Control, ``Recommendations for the Use of 
    Folic Acid to Reduce the Number of Cases of Spina Bifida and Other 
    Neural Tube Defects,'' Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Reports, 
    September 11, 1992, volume 41/No. RR-14, pages 1-7.
    
    List of Subjects in 21 CFR in Part 101
    
        Food labeling, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
        Therefore, under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and under 
    authority delegated to the Commissioner of Food and Drugs, 21 CFR part 
    101 is amended as follows:
    
    PART 101--FOOD LABELING
    
        1. The authority citation for 21 CFR part 101 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
    Authority: Secs. 4, 5, 6 of the Fair Packaging and Labeling Act (15 
    U.S.C. 1453, 1454, 1455); secs. 201, 301, 402, 403, 409, 701 of the 
    Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 321, 331, 342, 343, 
    348, 371).
    
        2. Section 101.14 is amended by revising paragraph (a)(2), by 
    adding a new paragraph (a)(4), and by revising paragraphs (b)(3)(i), 
    (d)(1), (d)(3), the introductory text of paragraph (e) and (e)(6), and 
    (g) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 101.14   Health claims: general requirements.
    
        (a) * * *
        (2) Substance means a specific food or component of food, 
    regardless of whether the food is in conventional food form or a 
    dietary supplement that includes vitamins, minerals, herbs, or other 
    similar nutritional substances.
    * * * * *
        (4) Dietary supplement means a food, not in conventional food form, 
    that supplies a component to supplement the diet by increasing the 
    total dietary intake of that component.
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (3) * * *
        (i) The substance must, regardless of whether the food is in 
    conventional food form or dietary supplement form, contribute taste, 
    aroma, or nutritive value, or any other technical effect listed in 
    Sec. 170.3(o) of this chapter, to the food and must retain that 
    attribute when consumed at levels that are necessary to justify a 
    claim; and
    * * * * *
        (d) General health claim labeling requirements. (1) When FDA 
    determines that a health claim meets the validity requirements of 
    paragraph (c) of this section, FDA will propose a regulation in subpart 
    E of this part to authorize the use of that claim. If the claim 
    pertains to a substance not provided for in Sec. 101.9 or Sec. 101.36, 
    FDA will propose amending that regulation to include declaration of the 
    substance.
    * * * * *
        (3) Nutrition labeling shall be provided in the label or labeling 
    of any food for which a health claim is made in accordance with 
    Sec. 101.9; for restaurant foods, in accordance with Sec. 101.10; or 
    for dietary supplements of vitamins or minerals, in accordance with 
    Sec. 101.36. The requirements of the introductory text of paragraph 
    (d)(3) of this section are effective as of May 8, 1993, except:
        (i) [Reserved]
        (ii) [Reserved]
        (iii) For dietary supplements of vitamins, minerals, herbs, or 
    other similar nutritional substances for which the requirements of 
    paragraph (d)(3) of this section will be effective July 5, 1994.
        (e) Prohibited health claims. No expressed or implied health claim 
    may be made on the label or in labeling for a food, regardless of 
    whether the food is in conventional food form or dietary supplement 
    form, unless:
    * * * * *
        (6) Except for dietary supplements, the food contains 10 percent or 
    more of the Reference Daily Intake or the Daily Reference Value for 
    vitamin A, vitamin C, iron, calcium, protein, or fiber per reference 
    amount customarily consumed prior to any nutrient addition.
    * * * * *
        (g)  Applicability. The requirements of this section apply to foods 
    intended for human consumption that are offered for sale, regardless of 
    whether the foods are in conventional food form or dietary supplement 
    form.
    
    
    Sec. 101.70(f)  [Amended]
    
        3. Section 101.70 is amended in paragraph (f) in the sample 
    petition for a health claim, in the paragraph beginning with ``The 
    undersigned,'' by adding the words ``or 403(r)(5)(D)'' after 
    ``403(r)(4)''.
    
        Dated: December 23, 1993.
    David A. Kessler,
    Commissioner of Food and Drugs.
    Donna E. Shalala,
    Secretary of Health and Human Services.
    [FR Doc. 93-31815 Filed 12-29-93; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4160-01-F
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
01/04/1994
Department:
Health and Human Services Department
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
93-31815
Dates:
July 5, 1994.
Pages:
395-426 (32 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: January 4, 1994, Docket No. 85N-061D
RINs:
0905-AB67
CFR: (16)
21 CFR 101.14(a)(5)
21 CFR 101.14(b)
21 CFR 101.14(b)(3)(ii)
21 CFR 101.14(c)
21 CFR 101.14(d)
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