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Dietary Supplements: Reports Reviewed by Tia Powell and Barbara A. Noah
Institute of Medicine, Dietary Supplements: A Framework for Evaluating Safety (Washington, D.C., 2005)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2021
Extract
The Institute of Medicine’s 2005 publication, Dietary Supplements: A Framework for Evaluating Safety, is authoritative and thorough, and thus representative of other reports by the Institute of Medicine (IOM). What makes this report particularly interesting, however, is the rich political subtext that exists in the interstices of the report, popping up here and there in brief comments and barely suppressed yelps of exasperation. To understand this context, it is useful to reflect for a moment on the special nature of the IOM and its relationship to government.
IOM is part of the National Academy of Sciences, and is a private, non-governmental organization that does not receive direct federal funding for its work. Rather, IOM studies are often funded by contract with governmental entities that request reports on particular topics. As a case in point, the dietary supplement study was requested and paid for by the FDA.
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- Reviews in Medical Ethics
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- Copyright © American Society of Law, Medicine and Ethics 2005