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| FDA/DDMAC Watch |
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As part of its effort to ensure that federal regulators comply with First Amendment rights, WLF carefully monitors (and responds to) every letter sent by Food and Drug Administration (FDA) officials that purports to challenge the pharmaceutical industry's advertising practices. WLF has determined that FDA's Division of Drug Marketing, Advertising, and Communications (DDMAC) routinely ignores First Amendment limitations on its regulatory authority. Accordingly, WLF's "DDMAC Watch" program focuses primarily on DDMAC's activities.
GOALS:
- To alert the press and public, on a real-time basis, to abuses occurring at DDMAC. WLF intends to respond within 24 hours after learning of any DDMAC letters that purport to regulate drug advertising.
- To create an on-going dialogue with DDMAC regulators, with the hope of encouraging increased compliance with First Amendment norms.
- To provide public health benefits. Direct-to-consumer drug advertising confers substantial benefits to consumers, by providing them with information about the availability of life-saving medications. Decreasing DDMAC interference with the free flow of truthful information will thus provide significant health benefits.
- To analyze DDMAC letters as a whole to detect patterns in DDMAC oversight of drug promotion that raise legal or other issues.
Posted here are copies of advertising enforcement letters sent by DDMAC (or to similar regulatory bodies within FDA) since WLF's June 21, 2005 launch of "DDMAC Watch," WLF's letters responding thereto, and the accompanying WLF press release.
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