FDA Lifts Restrictions On Abortion Pills By Mail
The agency also announced the appointment of Patrizia Cavazzoni as the director of its Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. Cavazzoni has been a senior executive at Pfizer.
Politico:
FDA Lifts Curbs On Dispensing Abortion Pills During Pandemic
The Biden administration is lifting restrictions on dispensing abortion pills by mail during the Covid-19 pandemic, reversing a Trump administration policy that the Supreme Court backed in January. Acting FDA Commissioner Janet Woodcock informed the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists in a letter Monday that her agency concluded that allowing patients to receive the pills via telemedicine and through the mail will not increase risks and will keep people safe from contracting the virus. (Miranda Ollstein and Tahir, 4/12)
Stat:
Cavazzoni To Take Over Influential Spot Atop FDA Drug Center
Patrizia Cavazzoni has been named the permanent leader of the Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, the agency’s acting commissioner, Janet Woodcock, announced Monday morning. The position of CDER director is one of the most influential at the sprawling agency. Cavazzoni, who is in her late 50s, was handpicked by Woodcock to join the agency in 2018 and has been leading the drug center in an acting role since last spring. Cavazzoni is known as a problem-solver who has taken on some of the FDA’s most pressing problems, former top FDA officials told STAT last year. (Florko, 4/12)
The Washington Post:
Biden’s FDA Takes New Steps Toward Limiting Toxic Heavy Metals In Commercial Baby Foods
The Food and Drug Administration, after congressional pressure, is now pursuing a plan to address high levels of heavy metals in baby foods. Although the agency has set maximum allowable levels of metals like lead in bottled water, it has not regulated levels of metals in baby and toddler foods, with the exception of arsenic in rice cereal. But spurred by a congressional report in February that found many of the products made by the country’s largest commercial baby food manufacturers contain significant levels of lead, arsenic, cadmium and mercury, advocacy groups, members of Congress and outraged parents have urged the agency to act. (Reiley, 4/12)