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Subject:
Is there the equivelant of the FDA for medications for anumals?
Category: Miscellaneous Asked by: jbutton-ga List Price: $2.00 |
Posted:
08 Jan 2006 16:30 PST
Expires: 07 Feb 2006 16:30 PST Question ID: 430895 |
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Subject:
Re: Is there the equivelant of the FDA for medications for anumals?
Answered By: pafalafa-ga on 08 Jan 2006 16:43 PST |
jbutton-ga, Hope your dog is fully recovered by now. The FDA itself is in charge of the safety of animal medicines, through the Center for Veterinary Medicine: http://www.fda.gov/cvm/default.html You should take particular note of this Q&A: http://www.fda.gov/cvm/faqs.html#311 My dog had a bad reaction to a drug the veterinarian prescribed. Who do I notify? Veterinarians and animal owners are encouraged to report adverse drug experiences and suspected product failures to the government agency that regulates the product in question. Visit our How to Report an Adverse Drug Experience page for the information and forms that are needed to report adverse experiences with veterinary drugs. All the best, pafalafa-ga |
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Subject:
Re: Is there the equivelant of the FDA for medications for anumals?
From: markvmd-ga on 08 Jan 2006 18:10 PST |
I am sorry to hear your pet had a serious health problem and trust a full recovery was made. I expect you used Biospot or some similar flea treatment that was not purchased from your veterinarian. These poisons are designed to mimic Frontline, Advantage, and Revolution topical treatments (each of those are trademarked names) but the over-the-counter products are just stronger versions of old poisons. Merial's Frontline product is very safe in that the active ingredinet has essentially no effect on the mammalian nervous system. Biospot and similar products work against all nervous systems, even mammals. Incidentally, Biospot is considered an organic product. Used in the correct way, Biospot et al are safe. The problem is determining exactly what the correct way is and how it varies from pet to pet. As there seems to be some problems with exactly how to safely use it, people are avoiding it more and more. The inexpensive price is a big draw, however. I do not expect my physician to carry groceries in his office. I do not visit him to pick up greeting cards. His receptionist does not sell stamps or money orders. To buy a topical flea product from a grocery store should be discouraged. |
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