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Sebelius vows to bolster FDA food safety oversight
WASHINGTON |
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Kansas Governor Kathleen Sebelius vowed on Tuesday to make the Food and Drug Administration a "world class" regulatory agency and to work with industry to improve food safety if she is confirmed as Health and Human Services Secretary.
Sebelius told the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee that it was too soon to talk about splitting FDA's food and drug safety responsibilities into two agencies as some critics have suggested.
"I think step one is restoring FDA as a world-class regulatory agency," Sebelius said at the first of two Senate confirmation hearings scheduled for this week.
Sebelius was tapped by President Barack Obama to lead his push to revamp the $2.5 trillion U.S. healthcare industry to rein in exploding costs and provide coverage for an estimated 46 million Americans who lack health insurance.
Committee Chairman Edward Kennedy said he "strongly" supported her nomination. Other members of the committee also voiced their support. Sebelius will testify on Thursday before the Senate Finance Committee, which will vote on the nomination before it is taken up by the full Senate.
As Health and Human Services secretary, Sebelius would oversee the FDA, the National Institutes of Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as well as the Medicare and Medicaid health programs for the elderly and poor.
INVOLVING INDUSTRY
Sebelius told the committee that improving the nation's food safety required industry involvement as well as beefing up the regulatory agency. A spate of product recalls because of salmonella contamination has undermined public confidence in the agency, sparking calls for revamping the FDA.
"We need to involve industry in making sure that we look at products as they move through the food chain and that there is some collaborative operation to make sure that those supply chains are also very involved in keeping our people safe," she said.
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack told a House of Representatives Appropriations subcommittee at a separate hearing that too many different agencies are responsible for food safety.
"It seems to me today we have competing philosophies," said Vilsack, with the U.S. Department of Agriculture focused more on prevention while the FDA aims for damage control because of limited resources.
Fifteen federal agencies, including FDA and USDA, are responsible for food safety.
On Monday, a California company recalled 2 million pounds of pistachios because of possible salmonella contamination, and the FDA told consumers to avoid all pistachio products.
Salmonella in peanut products traced to two plants sickened more than 700 people over the past four months and forced the recall of 3,000 products.
Sebelius, a former insurance commissioner in Kansas, told the committee she shared Obama's objectives for overhauling the U.S. healthcare system and that she would work to ensure that costs are addressed at the same time coverage is expanded to the uninsured.
"Inaction is not an option," she said. "The status quo is unacceptable and unsustainable."
U.S. healthcare costs doubled from 1996 to 2006 and now account for more than 16 percent of the economy, nearly twice the average of other developed nations.
(Editing by Eric Walsh)
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