Thursday, February 28, 2013

FDA Issues International Food Safety Capacity-Building Plan under the Food Safety Modernization Act



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FDA Issues International Food Safety Capacity-Building Plan under the Food Safety Modernization Act

Food Basket
Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition - Food and Drug Administration
February 28, 2013
In 2011, Congress enacted the FDA Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA), recognizing the unique challenges faced by FDA in the area of food safety in the 21st century. FSMA directs FDA to build a new food safety system based on the public health principle of comprehensive prevention, an enhanced focus on risk‐based resource allocation, and partnerships across the public and private sectors to minimize hazards from farm to table.  In addition, Section 305 of FSMA calls on FDA to develop a comprehensive plan to expand the technical, scientific, and regulatory food safety capacity of foreign governments and their respective food industries in countries that export foods to the United States (the “Plan”). This Plan meets the Section 305 requirement, and does so by incorporating FSMA’s principles of comprehensive prevention, risk-based resource allocation, and partnering.
This Plan provides a strategic framework for FDA’s international food safety capacity-building activities. It outlines goals, objectives, and key actions that will provide a framework for the FDA in setting priorities and managing international food safety capacity building programs.
The Plan will also enable all stakeholders to see the breadth of food safety capacity-building efforts on the part of FDA.   It charts a direction for how FDA will prioritize its capacity-building efforts based on risk, coordinate with other partners to avoid duplication of efforts, and to broaden the reach of technical assistance and capacity-building efforts.   FDA will use data to develop strategies, allowing the agency to make decisions about capacity-building based on identifiable needs, while also allowing the agency to measure the impact of its efforts. 
The plan addresses the six elements required by Section 305 of FSMA by incorporating them into four key goals and objectives, as supplemented by additional themes. The Plan’s key goals and objectives are:
  • Ensure efficiency across the FDA Foods and Veterinary Medicine Program
  • Increase effectiveness through evidence-based decision making
  • Support the exchange of information between FDA and other foreign government agencies or other entities
  • Enhance technical assistance and capacity-building in food
The full text of the International Capacity Building Plan is available at FSMA International Capacity Building.
 

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