Drug Products and
Their Regulations
© 2009 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved.
Reformism
 Current laws trace back to
two pieces of legislation from
the early 1900s
 Racist fears about deviant
behavior, including drug
misuse, played a role in the
development of drug
regulation
 Laws were developed to
regulate undesirable
behaviors
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Issues Leading to
Legislation
 Fraud in patent medicines that were
sold directly to the public


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Issues Leading to
Legislation
In the early 1900s, Collier’s
magazine ran a series of articles
attacking patent medicines—
“Great American Fraud”
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Issues Leading to
Legislation
 Opium and the Chinese
 U.S. was involved in international drug trade
 Opium smoking brought to U.S. by Chinese
________________
 Laws passed against
the importation,
manufacture, and
use of opium–
racism involved?
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Issues Leading to
Legislation
 Cocaine
 Present in
________________
 Viewed as a
_____________________
 _____________________
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1906 Pure Food and
Drugs Act
 _________________________________
_________________________________
_________________________________
 Later amended to
_________________________________
_________________________________
_________________________________
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Harrison Act of 1914
 A law that required those who
_________________________________
_________________________________
_________________________________
 Later expanded to include:
_________________________________
_________________________________
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Two Bureaus, Two Types
of Regulation
 The Pure Food and Drugs Act (1906)
 U.S. __________________________
 Goal: ______________________________
 Harrison Act (1914)
 U.S. ___________________________
 Goal:_______________________________
___________________________________
___________________________________
___________________________________
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Regulation of
Pharmaceuticals
1. ___________________________
The contents of the product must be
accurately listed on the label
 FDA encouraged voluntary cooperation and
compliance
 1912 Sherley Amendment outlawed “false
and fraudulent” therapeutic claims on labels
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Regulation of
Pharmaceuticals
2. ____________________
 Originally—no legal requirement that medications be
safe
 1938 Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act required premarket testing for toxicity
 Companies required to submit a New Drug
Application (NDA) to the FDA
 Major implication: _________________________________
 Directions must be included
 Adequate instructions for consumer OR
 Drug can be used only with physician prescription
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Regulation of
Pharmaceuticals
3. _______________________
 1962 Kefauver-Harris Amendments
 Pre-approval required before human testing
 Advertising for prescription drugs must include
information about adverse reactions
 Every new drug must be demonstrated to be
effective for the illnesses mentioned on label
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Marketing a New Drug
 Preclinical research and development
 IND submitted to the FDA
 Clinical research and development
 Phase One—
 Phase Two—
 Phase Three—
 Permission to market
 May require 10+ years and $800+ million
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Marketing a New Drug
 Orphan Drug Act—tax and other
financial incentives
 Prescription Drug Marketing Act of
1988—regulation of free samples, etc.
 1997 FDA Modernization Act—
guidelines for postmarketing reporting,
distribution of information on off-label
uses
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Dietary Supplements
Dietary Supplement Health and Marketing Act
 Regulated______________




______________________
Labels must be __________
Products can’t make
__________________ direct
claims
Products can make _______
health claims
Products can be marketed ?
______________________
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Controlled Substances
 Early enforcement
 18th Amendment
 Physicians and pharmacists arrested; growth of illegal
drug trade
 Stiffer penalties
 Jones-Miller Act
 Prohibition on importation of opium for heroin
 Prison vs. rehabilitation
 Punishment seemed not to be working
 “Narcotic farms”
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Controlled Substance
 Bureau of Narcotics (Treasury Department)




“Drug Czar”
Marijuana Tax Act
Mandatory minimum sentences (1951)
1956 Narcotic Drug Control Act toughened penalties
 Drug Abuse Control Act Amendments of
1965
 ___________________________________
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Comprehensive Drug Abuse
Prevention and Control Act of 1970
 Replaced or updated all previous laws
 Drugs controlled by the Act are under federal
jurisdiction
 ___________________________________
 Prevention and treatment funding increased
 ______________________________________
_____________________________________
 Enforcement separated from scientific and
medical decisions
© 2009 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved.
Comprehensive Drug Abuse
Prevention and Control Act of 1970
 Possession and selling
penalties
 Omnibus Drug Act
 Drug precursors
 Drug paraphernalia
 Office of National Drug
Control Policy
established
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State and Local
Regulations
 Difference in
penalties from state
to state
 Federal law
overrides state law
 Significant growth
in number of
Americans in prison
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Federal Support for
Drug Screening
 Military and federal employees
 Transportation workers
 Employees at private
companies
 Public schools employees
 Testing methods
 __________________________
__________________________
__________________________
© 2009 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved.
Impact of Drug
Enforcement
 Budget
 International
programs
 Other federal
agencies
In this raid, an international task force seized
two tons of cocaine in the Caribbean Basin.
© 2009 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved.
Impact of Drug
Enforcement
 Other costs
 Cost of prison population
 Crimes committed to purchase
drugs
 Corruption in law enforcement
 Conflicting international policy goals
 Loss of individual freedom
 Drug use has not been eliminated
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Effectiveness of Control
 About 10-15 percent of
illegal drug supply is
seized each year
 When supplies are
restricted, prices go up
 Higher prices and
increased difficulty in
obtaining drugs may deter
some would-be users
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Seized Ecstasy
Key Dates In American Drug,
Alcohol, and Tobacco Use
1791 Congress
Passes Excise
Tax on Whiskey
leading to
Whiskey
Rebellion
1906 Pure
Food &
Drug Act
1874
Women’s
Christian
Temperance
Union
Formed
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1914
Harrison
Act
1913
Cigarette
Brands
Introduced
Key Dates In American Drug,
Alcohol, and Tobacco Use
1954
Alcoholism
Declared a
Disease by the
AMA
First Publication
Suggests Link
Between Smoking
and Cancer
1938 Food,
Drug, &
Cosmetic
Act
1919 – 1933:
Prohibition
1937
Marijuana
added to
list of
controlled
drugs
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1939 Alcoholics
Anonymous
Founded
Key Dates In American Drug,
Alcohol, and Tobacco Use
1970
Comprehensive
Drug Abuse
Prevention and
Control Act,
and
Drug
Enforcement
Agency (DEA)
created
1964 First
Surgeon
General’s
Report to link
smoking to
health
problems
1956 Narcotic
Control Act
1960’s Low
Tar
Cigarettes
Introduced
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1965
amphetamines
barbiturates, &
hallucinogens
brought under
federal control
Key Dates In American Drug,
Alcohol, and Tobacco Use
1973
Arizona 1st State
to restrict
smoking in
public places,
Nixon declares
War on Drugs
1988
Creation of the
Office on
National Drug
Control Policy
1982 “Just
Say No”
Campaign
Started
1977
First Great
American
Smokeout
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1987 All
States
comply with
age 21
drinking
requirement
Key Dates In American Drug,
Alcohol, and Tobacco Use
1996
Marijuana
approved for
medical use in
CA and AZ,
EPA classifies
2nd Hand
Smoke as a
Group-A
carcinogen
1991
Nicotine
Patch
Introduced
1993
Widespread
Binge
Drinking
documented
in 1st College
Alcohol Study
by Harvard
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1999 National Alcohol
Screening Day
Created,
Multistate Master
Tobacco Settlement
Agreement Approved,
Club Drugs get
national attention
1997
Heroin
Chic
promoted
by fashion
industry
Key Dates In American Drug,
Alcohol, and Tobacco Use
By 2012
Twenty states legalize
medical marijuana
2013
Washington
and
Colorado
legalize
marijuana
© 2009 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved.