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Cheerios are drug?!?!

sadie

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i hate the FDA...

RAW STORY) Popular US breakfast cereal Cheerios is a drug, at least if the claims made on the label by its manufacturer General Mills are anything to go by, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has said.

“Based on claims made on your product’s label, we have determined that your Cheerios Toasted Whole Grain Oat Cereal is promoted for conditions that cause it to be a drug,” the FDA said in a letter to General Mills which was posted on the federal agency’s website Tuesday.

Cheerios labels claim that eating the cereal can help lower bad cholesterol, a risk factor for coronary heart disease, by four percent in six weeks.

Citing a clinical study, the product labels also claim that eating two servings a day of Cheerios helps to reduce bad cholesterol when eaten as part of a diet low in saturated fat and cholesterol, the FDA letter says.

Those claims indicate that Cheerios — said by General Mills to be the best-selling cereal in the United States — is intended to be used to lower cholesterol and prevent, lessen or treat the disease hypercholesterolemia, and to treat and prevent coronary heart disease.

“Because of these intended uses, the product is a drug,” the FDA concluded in its letter.

Not only that, but Cheerios is a new drug because it has not been “recognized as safe and effective for use in preventing or treating hypercholesterolemia or coronary heart disease,” the FDA said.

That means General Mills may not legally market Cheerios unless it applies for approval as a new drug or changes the way it labels the small, doughnut-shaped cereal, the FDA said.

General Mills defended the claims on Cheerios packaging, saying in a statement that Cheerios’ soluble fiber heart health claim has been FDA-approved for 12 years, and that its “lower your cholesterol four percent in six weeks” message has been featured on the box for more than two years.

The FDA’s quibble is not about whether Cheerios cereal is good for you but over “how the Cheerios cholesterol-lowering information is presented on the Cheerios package and website,” said General Mills.

“We look forward to discussing this with FDA and to reaching a resolution.”

Meanwhile, the FDA warned in its letter that if General Mills fails to “correct the violations” on its labels, boxes of Cheerios could disappear from supermarket and wholesaler shelves around the United States and the company could face legal action.

According to General Mills, one in eight boxes of cereal sold in the United States is a box of Cheerios. The cereal debuted on the US market in 1941.


Edit: Good thing the FDA is cracking down. Next thing you know we'll have people with high cholesterol and blood pressure robbing my grandmother for money for their fix. Aldo the FDA is in NO way shape or form tied in with the pharmaceutical industry whatsoever. And they never try to stamp out "alternative methods" to make way for pharmaceuticals with almsot zero efficacy in clinical trials and are often debilitating as well.
Don't worry about the fluoride being dumped into your water as well. It's good for you. It has no ill effects on health and was never tested by Hitler in nazi concentration camps either. WAKE UP!
 
F'n Feds! I think your edit summed it up fairly well.
 
Honestly

They should be treated as any other supplement company.....if you are going to make those claims be prepared to reclassified.....
 
so oatmeal should also be regulated by the FDA? how about we take it a step farther and regulate all low fat or fat free foods since they also help control heart disease.. wait.. gyms too.. cardio vascular activity decreases the risk of heart disease also.. where does it end exactly? and if we are going so far this side perhaps there should be some disclaimer/warning label at Mc Donalds since their entire menu can CAUSE heart disease..
 
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They should be treated as any other supplement company.....if you are going to make those claims be prepared to reclassified.....

i agree. the problem is you get people with heart disease or hyperlipidemia and they think "oh i'll just start eating cheerios and i'll be fine"
 
i agree. the problem is you get people with heart disease or hyperlipidemia and they think "oh i'll just start eating cheerios and i'll be fine"

Well, On a side note I think a big man bowl of honey nut cheerios sounds good!:D;)
 
I just bought 4lbs of the generic Cheerios today. Good stuff.

Sucks but when you make those claims...
 
I'd like to think that the FDA was being tongue in cheek and saying that if food manufacturers were serious about pressing that their foods have medicinal-level qualities they need to treat them as such. I suspect though the quotes are taken out of context.

Highlights from the FDA letter:
“Based on claims made on your product’s label, we have determined that Cheerios® Toasted Whole Grain Oat Cereal is promoted for conditions that cause it to be a drug because the product is intended for use in the prevention, mitigation, and treatment of disease.”

“The label of your Cheerios® cereal claims a degree of risk reduction for coronary heart disease by stating that Cheerios® can lower cholesterol by four percent in six weeks. High blood total and LDL cholesterol levels are a surrogate endpoint for coronary heart disease; therefore, the cholesterol-lowering claims on the Cheerios® label attribute a degree of risk reduction for coronary heart disease, because if total and LD cholesterol levels decline, the risk of coronary heart disease declines as well.

“We have determined that your website www.wholegrainnation.com … bears the following unauthorized heath claims:

- Heart-healthy diets rich in whole grain foods can reduce the risk of heart disease.

- Including whole grain as part of a health diet may help reduce the risk of certain types of cancers.

- Regular consumption of whole grains as part of a low-fat diet reduces the risk for some cancers, especially cancers of the stomach and colon.”

The point is that food manufacturers have been conning people into thinking that buying their product will improve the quality of their lives.

Here is another case, regarding a recent settlement made by Kellogg's for false advertising:
Kellogg Settles Charges Over False Advertising
USAgNet - 04/28/2009

Kellogg Company, the world's leading producer of cereal, settled a complaint by the Federal Trade Commission about the company's advertising claims touting a breakfast of Frosted Mini-Wheats as "clinically shown to improve kids' attentiveness by nearly 20%." The federal agency said in a statement released on April 20 that the claims were "false and violated federal law."

The proposed settlement bars what the FTC states are deceptive or misleading cognitive health claims for Kellogg's breakfast foods and snack foods and bars the company from misrepresenting any trials or studies.

The FTC complained as quoted in the April 20 statement that "Kellogg claimed in a national advertising campaign including television, print, and Internet advertising as well as product packaging that a breakfast of Frosted Mini-Wheat cereal is clinically shown to improve children’s attentiveness by nearly 20 percent." The agency said the fact is that only half of the children in the trial who ate the cereal for breakfast showed any improvement in attentiveness and only one in nine children improved by 20 percent or more.

The agency pointed out that trial controls were children who did NOT eat any breakfast. Compared to those who did not eat breakfast, those who ate Frosted Mini-Wheats were under 11% percent better in attentiveness and relatively few were nearly 20 percent more attentive.


A great summary of the issue:
http://www.theskepticsguide.org/sgublog/?p=716
 
so oatmeal should also be regulated by the FDA? how about we take it a step farther and regulate all low fat or fat free foods since they also help control heart disease.. wait.. gyms too.. cardio vascular activity decreases the risk of heart disease also.. where does it end exactly? and if we are going so far this side perhaps there should be some disclaimer/warning label at Mc Donalds since their entire menu can CAUSE heart disease..

Hi Sadie, I think the problem is with the manufacturer's hyperbolic claims, not the food itself. It's dishonest advertising.
 
They should be treated as any other supplement company.....if you are going to make those claims be prepared to reclassified.....

I totally agree. If it was a sport supplement it would be torn from the shelves immediately. They have been given a much longer leash since it is a breakfast food. this company has to play by the rules and they should have to change their label.
 
the FDA just gave them the green light to charge
$80 a box for the cereal - pharma is big business
 
the FDA just gave them the green light to charge
$80 a box for the cereal - pharma is big business

LOL, yeah they would have to do that in order to help pay for the scientific studies they would have to run for years in order to provide evidence for their claims. Whoever put those claims on the box is either very stupid or very smart. Im surprised the FDA didnt make a stink about this a long time ago.
 
Well

The reality is that General Mills is making outlandish claims and uneducated people may fall for that BS and quit their medications and start eating Cheerios.....what is fair is fair.......some need to be protected from marketing scams.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
The reality is that General Mills is making outlandish claims and uneducated people may fall for that BS and quit their medications and start eating Cheerios.....what is fair is fair.......some need to be protected from marketing scams.


People would be better off if they realized diet is the key to being healthy--not drugs....I'm not saying I think Cheerios are part of a good diet, but diet is key. I'd say over 90% of RX meds are unnecessary and cause more harm than good-- Statins and Acid Reflux meds both being near the top of the list

and most marketing is BS anyway..Subway calls their shit "healthy"
 
can someone post a link or tell me where this story came from? im trying to share it with a friend...
 
How bout if people just start to eat "real" food and we abolish the FDA. :)
 
Oh come on, I am getting so tired of the govt trying to protect stupid people. No one in their right mind with any form of intelligence would think that just eating a freaking bowl of cheerios a day is going to cure heart disease, high cholesterol, etc. If they do then someone should go after their doctor for being an idiot for not telling them otherwise.

You cannot regulate intelligence, that's what Darwinism is for to clear the gene pool of people who believe this crap. Let's just all bend over and give the govt all our money and sit at home waiting for them to tell us when to take a crap.:mad:
 
where have you guys been?

My doctor just wrote me a script for a 6 months supply worth of Cheerios.
 

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