Dec 16 2024 Brief of R.J. Reynolds Vapor Co., et al ... (Distributed) Jan 10 2025 Reply of petitioners Food and Drug Administration, et al. filed. (Distributed) Jan 17 2025 Sealed material from the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit ...
Federal officials Wednesday released a far-reaching proposal to make cigarettes less addictive by capping their nicotine content.
The proposed rule from the Food and Drug Administration comes in the final days of President ... Even if the effort goes ahead under Trump, tobacco companies like Reynolds American and Altria are almost certain to challenge it in court, delaying ...
In the final days of the Biden administration, the F.D.A. is moving ahead with a proposal to require companies to produce a less addictive product for traditional smokers.
Over 35 years after the first study linking the artificial food dye Red 3 to thyroid cancer in rats was published, the U.S. is beginning to phase it out of foods and drugs.
R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.'s Newport brand is by far the top-selling menthol-flavored cigarette in the U.S., and the No. 2 cigarette overall.
Red 3—also called FD&C Red No. 3, erythrosine or E127—has been widely used in food, cosmetics and pharmaceuticals since its FDA approval in 1969. You've likely encountered Red 3 before. It's a common additive to many candies,
Federal officials on Wednesday released a far-reaching proposal to make cigarettes far less addictive by capping their nicotine content, a goal long sought by antismoking advocates that is unlikely to go into effect anytime soon.
The proposed rule from the Food and Drug Administration comes in the final days of President ... Even if the effort goes ahead under Trump, tobacco companies like Reynolds American and Altria are almost certain to challenge it in court, delaying ...
The Food and Drug Administration announced Wednesday it was banning Red 3 dye from food and beverages in the U.S. over its link to cancer in laboratory animals.
A proposed FDA rule would mandate a reduction to minimally addictive or nonaddictive levels, but the incoming Trump administration isn’t expected to follow through on the idea.