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BFAD may get boost in the arm by November - Cayetano


MANILA, Philippines - The Bureau of Food and Drugs (BFAD) may get a much-needed boost as early as November, when a bill seeking to broaden the agency's regulatory capacity passes both Houses of Congress. In a statement, Sen. Pilar Juliana Cayetano on Tuesday expressed optimism that the Senate Bill 2645 which aims to convert BFAD into a much-bigger Food, Drugs, Cosmetics and Devices Administration (FDCDA) will be passed into a law before year-end. "I expect the bicameral version approved and signed into law before the end of the year," said Cayetano, who chairs the Senate committee on health and demography. She said the Senate approved the bill on second reading on the last day of session last Oct. 8, before the Senate went on a month-long recess. Its counterpart version, House Bill No. 3293, was approved on third reading in the House of Representatives earlier this year. "The FDCDA will have expanded powers that BFAD currently does not enjoy. It can order the ban, recall or withdrawal of health products, including food, drugs, cosmestics and devices that fail safety standards," Cayetano said. The FDCDA will also have the authority to conduct spot checks on establishments for compliance, issue cease-and-desist orders and seize violative products, she added. "The FDCDA's broad powers include accrediting private laboratories to complement its work, especially in times of public health emergencies, like the recent melamine scare," she noted. But she added the agency will continue to assume primary jurisdiction in the collection of health products for testing purposes. The Senate version seeks to establish testing laboratories for the agency in Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao and reinforcing its presence by maintaining field offices in all regions and inspectors in major ports of entry. To augment the agency's budget, the FDCDA will be allowed to retain all fees, fines, royalties and other charges it collects without requiring prior approval from any government department. Principal co-authors of the Senate bill include Senate President Manuel Villar Jr. and Sen. Loren Legarda. "We need the support of all lawmakers for the swift passage of this bill. BFAD's current mandate cannot be achieved with its current status. The increase in the number of products and establishments it needs to regulate has overtaken the bureau's ability to consistently implement its standards and monitor compliance," Cayetano said. Citing data from BFAD, Cayetano said the agency only had 195 staff tasked to inspect 45,747 establishments selling food, drug and cosmetic products all over the country in 2006. Some of the worst discrepancies can be found in Region IV (only 13 inspectors for 6,827 establishments or 525 per inspector), Region I (6 inspectors for 2,748 establishments or 458 per inspector) and Region III (10 inspectors 4,254 establishments or 425 per inspector). Worsening the agency's woes are its inadequate budget. BFAD spends an average of P271 for the inspection of one establishment. To cover 45,747 establishments, BFAD would need P12.4 million, but it only has P2.4 million as inspection budget. Additionally, around 50,954 products are registered with BFAD in 2006, but the agency was only able to test 16,000 samples of these products for safety standards due to insufficient budget and equipment. - GMANews.TV