• Home
  • News
  • Charts
  • Market
  • Trading
  • Economy
    • Companies
    • Business
  • Videos
What's Hot

🟩Forex MID Week Analysis 20 – 24 March

March 20, 2023

AUD/USD floats near two-week high past 0.6700 as fears of banking collapse ease, RBA Minutes eyed

March 20, 2023

How the Swiss ‘trinity’ forced UBS to save Credit Suisse

March 20, 2023
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Contact
Facebook Twitter Instagram
GFS News
  • Home
  • News

    AUD/USD floats near two-week high past 0.6700 as fears of banking collapse ease, RBA Minutes eyed

    March 20, 2023

    AUD/USD oscillates at around the 20-day EMA on risk-on mood, RBA minutes eyed

    March 20, 2023

    Silver bulls are movin gin again on the front side of the bull trend, eye $22.88s

    March 20, 2023

    Canadian CPI Preview: Forecasts from five major banks, inflation growth to decelerate

    March 20, 2023

    ECB: A 25 bps rate hike looks likely in May – UOB

    March 20, 2023
  • Charts
  • Market
  • Trading
  • Economy
    • Companies
    • Business
  • Videos

    🟩Forex MID Week Analysis 20 – 24 March

    March 20, 2023

    Watch Forex Trading: LIVE: NZDUSD, USDJPY, AUDUSD (Ft. Eivindfx)

    March 20, 2023

    My Best Forex Trading Setups this Week: XAUUSD EURUSD USDJPY SPX500 NZDUSD & MORE

    March 19, 2023

    Inflation is Back – with Vengeance.

    March 18, 2023

    BREAKING: Prop Firm Crackdown…

    March 18, 2023
en English
zh-CN 简体中文en Englishfr Françaisde Deutschit Italianopt Portuguêsru Русскийes Español
GFS News
Home » F.D.A. Lets Juul Appeal Ban and Stay on the Market During a Review
Business

F.D.A. Lets Juul Appeal Ban and Stay on the Market During a Review

AdminBy AdminJuly 7, 2022No Comments5 Mins Read2 Views
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

The Food and Drug Administration has decided to allow Juul Labs’ vaping products to stay on the market temporarily, citing “scientific issues” that warrant a review of the agency’s ruling last month to ban the company’s e-cigarettes.

The agency’s decision to conduct an internal review effectively moves the dispute out of the public eye in appellate court, where Juul had initially received a temporary reprieve, and returns it to the agency’s private administrative process. But the F.D.A. cautioned that its latest move, first announced in a tweet on Tuesday night, should not be misconstrued as a decision rescinding the original order.

The F.D.A.’s decision is a twist in Juul’s journey toward seeking official authorization under rules that required it and other companies to prove their products provide more benefit to public health than harm. It was blamed for the teenage vaping crisis more than four years ago, drawing widespread anger from parents, schools and local policymakers as well as Congress.

On June 23, the F.D.A. took many by surprise when it issued an order telling Juul to stop selling its e-cigarette products in the United States. In a statement, the agency said that Juul’s applications to remain on the market “lacked evidence” to prove they would benefit public health and included “insufficient and conflicting data” about “potentially harmful chemicals leaching” from its e-liquid pods.

In a statement on Wednesday, Joe Murillo, Juul’s chief regulatory officer, said he believed the company would meet the standard of being “appropriate for the protection of the public health” as it moved forward with the F.D.A. in an evidence-based process.

The initial ban was celebrated by those who said the company should be held to account for luring teenagers to use its product with appealing mango and crème brûlée flavors and ads depicting young people. The F.D.A.’s decision was panned by those who pointed to e-cigarettes as a cessation alternative for millions of adult smokers who switched to the devices, which are widely credited with being less toxic than traditional cigarettes.

Vaping companies have been required to seek the F.D.A.’s authorization to sell their products, and many are going through that process now. The F.D.A. has said that it had approved a handful of vaping devices and denied more than a million applications.

In the brief filed last week, Juul argued that it had helped two million adult smokers quit traditional cigarettes. Juul also said it had been treated unfairly, noting that it had been singled out by members of Congress who nudged the agency to spurn the company.

Juul also said that it had received just one opportunity to address the F.D.A.’s concerns before it issued the denial. In contrast, other companies were allowed to submit up to 14 amendments to their applications, Juul said in its court filing.

The F.D.A. has not released the document outlining its reasons for denying Juul’s marketing application. Juul’s court filing said the agency contended “in more than two dozen places” that Juul did not provide enough data on four chemicals.

The company’s filing said that the four chemicals were identified in a study examining toxins leaching from its plastic pods into the e-liquid inside, which becomes vaporized when heated and is then inhaled by users. The agency took exception with the fact that none of those chemicals had appeared in Juul studies listing the makeup of its devices’ aerosol plume, the company said in its court briefing.

Juul said it supplied thousands of pages of data in which those chemicals would have been disclosed if they were detectable in the aerosol.

Dr. Laura Crotty Alexander, an e-cigarette researcher and associate professor of medicine at the University of California, San Diego, has published studies critical of Juul devices’ effects on the brains of mice.

But after reviewing the company’s court papers, she said its argument made sense: It is possible that chemicals that show up in a liquid turn into a different compound after they are heated and vaporized. Dr. Crotty Alexander said that occurred in her own studies of chemicals in e-cigarettes.

“It’s not surprising that a chemical that was originally liquid is not an aerosol,” Dr. Crotty Alexander said. The names of the chemicals in question were redacted, she noted, making it difficult to assess further.

Mr. Murillo, Juul’s chief regulatory officer, said the chemicals in the liquid “may not be transferred and detected in the aerosol due to a variety of factors, including compound volatility or chemical structure.”

In its court filing, Juul emphasized that the F.D.A. had all the information it needed to see that any leached chemicals were undetectable in its aerosol.

Juul “did provide that data — 6,000 pages of it,” the company said in its filing. “Had F.D.A. done a more thorough review (like it did for other applicants), it would have seen data showing that those chemicals are not observable in the aerosol that Juul users inhale.”

Theodore Wagener, director of the Center for Tobacco Research at The Ohio State University, said the agency’s initial ban was striking, given that independent research teams, including his own, had found that Juul devices were far less toxic than traditional cigarettes.

“Juul aerosol has significantly lower-level and fewer toxicants than cigarettes, for sure,” Dr. Wagener said, noting that Juul’s devices also had lower levels of chemicals than other e-cigarettes. “That’s what made this surprising to me.”



Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Why People Are Worried About Banks

March 18, 2023

Inflation in February

March 14, 2023

Here’s How to Solve a 25-Story Rubik’s Cube

March 11, 2023

The Second-Biggest Bank Failure

March 11, 2023

At This Year’s Oscars, Two Films Hit All ‘Four Quadrants’

March 10, 2023

Read What Murdoch Said in His Deposition in the Fox-Dominion Case

February 27, 2023
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top News

AUD/USD floats near two-week high past 0.6700 as fears of banking collapse ease, RBA Minutes eyed

March 20, 2023

How the Swiss ‘trinity’ forced UBS to save Credit Suisse

March 20, 2023

Commodity markets likely to escape banking crisis fallout, traders say

March 20, 2023

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest forex and economy news directly to your inbox.

Advertisement
Demo

GFS News is one of the most trusted news portal dedicated to Forex & Economy news from all around the world. Follow us to get the latest news.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest YouTube
Top Insights

🟩Forex MID Week Analysis 20 – 24 March

March 20, 2023

AUD/USD floats near two-week high past 0.6700 as fears of banking collapse ease, RBA Minutes eyed

March 20, 2023

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest forex and economy news directly to your inbox.

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2023 GFS News. All rights reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.