Experts Question GAO's Recipe For Food GRAS Oversight
This article was originally published in The Tan Sheet
Executive Summary
FDA has bigger fish to fry than changing the GRAS process for food ingredients, experts say following a Government Accountability Office recommendation that the agency increase oversight of the process
You may also be interested in...
GRAS Self-Affirmation Fades As Sound Strategy Under FSMA
Experts at a FDLI conference say Food Safety Modernization Act obligations should convince companies to move beyond self-affirming food ingredients as “generally recognized as safe” without notifying FDA. While the GRAS process generally is considered effective, it lacks transparency in some areas.
GRAS Self-Affirmation Fades As Sound Strategy Under FSMA
Experts at a FDLI conference say Food Safety Modernization Act obligations should convince companies to move beyond self-affirming food ingredients as “generally recognized as safe” without notifying FDA. While the GRAS process generally is considered effective, it lacks transparency in some areas.
GRAS Self-Affirmation Fades As Sound Strategy Under FSMA
Experts at a FDLI conference say Food Safety Modernization Act obligations should convince companies to move beyond self-affirming food ingredients as “generally recognized as safe” without notifying FDA. While the GRAS process generally is considered effective, it lacks transparency in some areas.