Rather than re-write an idea, I’m just going to put part of a prior suggestion I had here.  The FDA in no way would ever have the budget and manpower to keep on top of every factory not only here but any place where drugs and food are produced that we consume. 

Technology is needed to report in to a bank of servers and this is a good idea for all countries for that matter, to report in via the web on the lots of of food or drugs being within tolerance levels for consumption, if not, alerts go out at both ends and an FDA official is alerted to follow up, and would make their enforcement and compliance efforts much more meaningful.  It comes down to audit tables and business intelligence for a potential solution to help the FDA stay on top of all the issues.  BD

FDA May Need Major Restructuring – Catch up with Technology

Some issues are a result of still being paper driven as timely reports and real time information are not available, but they are not the only government agency in this scenario, only one of the most critical though.  Also, some members of Congress don’t use computers either and felt uncomfortable about talking about technology, so that adds to the confusion and a few more stuck in the past with understanding where technology needs to be today and what is required with technology to regulate.  It was reported that some key employees were still writing out reports in longhand too. 

A short time back I added some suggestions using technology and copied below. The FDA does need some technology help to cover all the bases they have today as there is no way in the world they can physically have enough people to cover the world;  it’s not like it was a couple years ago by any means with the number of imported food and drug items increased, and they are feeling the same pinch as many others, except in their case it’s top priority work for all of us and time for some heavy duty Business Intelligence.  BD

FDA is close to being at a tipping point -- the agency is hanging on by its fingertips in protecting us," said William K. Hubbard, who worked for the agency for 27 years. "If something is not done, they could become a failed institution, and no one wants that. The FDA is not only important to protecting the public health but also to the industries it regulates."

Although the FDA has started opening offices overseas to try to better police safety standards at the source, experts say much more needs to be done. For starters, the agency needs to sharply boost inspections abroad, develop strict new regulatory standards, and update and integrate its computer systems, which are woefully antiquated and disjointed, Nielsen and others said.

"It's still largely a paper-driven agency," Nielsen said. "The agency has great information pigeonholed all over the place, but it cannot be applied in real time, which is what you need today."

One of my ideas from a prior post:

FDA to detain food shipments from China – Why not add some technology to the inspection processes?

I don’t think in view of the current events, there was a lot of choice here for the FDA, and we do need to know that the quality of both our food and pharmaceutical products is good.

One thing in particular that springs to mind for me here here is perhaps some use of business intelligence for monitoring.  This is not a cure all for the entire process, but technology can aid and offer some nice assistance here.  A reporting function would need to be set up to automatically report back to a central agency on criteria established for each drug or food product.  At the receiving end, anything out of tolerance would be immediately sent to an alert.  Now granted, this should be done locally from every plant, but when you can’t physically have agents in place at every factory all the time, this could offer some real relief and help.

With today’s speed of data transmissions, a server farm could be set up to monitor this type of activity and before an over seas factory began to export to the US, this would be a prerequisite to be established.  Each lot before packaged would send the chemical content back to the central gathering agency and report in, with both the US agency and the local factory itself having the information at hand. 

Again, this comes back to adding some new software and algorithms to the process, but computers could provide this information in a couple of seconds.  Audit trails would also be there to allow for checking back on submissions.  A bank of sophisticated server farms could do the work.  This would also tend to build product credibility as well if everyone knows up front that the chemical content was being reported before the end packaging occurs.  Again, not to replace an actual physical inspection all together, but, it would also stand to make those inspections much more information rich and valuable and create safe consumable products.

We do so much today by remote transmissions with information reporting, why not put in in place and use it where it is vital.  This could also be done globally too, with each country receiving reports on products they import from other countries.  It would sure beat some of the guesswork we see out there today, not to mention illnesses and death from products that are tainted or contaminated.  With the global economy changing every day, it makes sense to know what we are getting and it is impossible to physically monitor all the systems without using some modern day technology.

A secondary thought here too is to ensure that all products carry a label showing the city, country, etc. of where the product was manufactured so we don’t  incur the long time delays in figuring out which lot went where, no more blind shipping documents as they exist today.  Wonder why this process has not been considered yet?  BD 

Government officials are saying that the peanut plant tied to the recent salmonella outbreak shipped peanut butter 12 times in the past two years despite finding salmonella in internal tests of the products, this morning’s Washington Post reports.

The government didn’t know about the problem until now because companies don’t have to disclose internal test results, the Post explains. Meantime, the feds also said yesterday that they’d found four strains of salmonella at the Georgia plant, owned by Peanut Corporation of America, and state inspection records show “a pattern of unsanitary conditions over several years,” according to the Post.

The nationwide salmonella outbreak tied to peanut butter and peanut products is hitting a little too close to home for President Obama.

Speaking of his 7-year-old daughter on NBC's Today show Monday, he said, "That's what Sasha eats for lunch probably three times a week. And you know, I don't want to have to worry about whether she's going to get sick as a consequence to having her lunch."

Obama promised a "complete review" of Food and Drug Administration operations. "I think that the FDA has not been able to catch some of these things as quickly as I expect them to."

Obama: 'Complete review' of FDA operations - USATODAY.com

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