Food regulator FSSAI will bring in rules on the presence of
doping substances in food and nutritional supplements that are usually
sold off the shelf
‘We have formed a working committee consisting of experts from
relevant industries for technical assistance,’ FSSAI CEO Pawan Kumar
Agarwal has said. Photo: Pradeep Gaur/Mint
New Delhi: The country’s food regulator now wants to curb the use of
prohibited performance-enhancing substances by sports professionals
through nutritional supplements.
Over the next few months, the Food Safety and Standards Authority of
India (FSSAI) will bring in regulations on the presence of doping
substances in food and nutritional supplements that are usually sold off
the shelf. Companies will have to follow specific labelling norms for
selling food and nutritional supplements. Both domestically produced
products and imported supplements will come under the FSSAI regime.
FSSAI, which signed a five-year agreement with National Anti-Doping
Agency (NADA) on Thursday, will develop capacities at its laboratories
to test for the presence of restricted or prohibited substances in food
and nutritional supplements.
At present, FSSAI laboratories do not have either the expertise or the capacity for this. NADA, however, does.
“We have formed a working committee consisting of experts from
relevant industries for technical assistance. A draft regulation will be
discussed in the next meeting on 21 September,” said Pawan Kumar
Agarwal, chief executive officer, FSSAI.
Besides FSSAI’s own team, the committee will have representatives
from NADA, Sports Authority of India (SAI) and Narcotics Control Bureau,
among others. FSSAI is also in the process of constituting a team for
surveillance and enforcement of regulations. “As part of awareness
development among consumers, we’ll also bring a special usage guide.
Most of the doping is done without knowledge and they have ill-effects
in the long term,” Agarwal added.
FSSAI and NADA held a series of meetings on the subject of doping in
the last few months after the latter requested the food regulator to
frame standards and regulations. “Doping is a menace we need to stop.
With FSSAI, we’ll try to ensure availability of safe supplements for
competing athletes, among others. There are about 300 substances that
are prohibited globally. Of these, about 10 such as steroids, are
commonly used,” said Navin Aggarwal, CEO and director general, NADA.
Last year, FSSAI notified standards for health supplements,
nutraceuticals, foods for special dietary use, foods for special medical
purposes, functional foods and novel foods. According to the
notification, these foods should “consist of a composition delivering
the desired level of energy, proteins, vitamins and minerals, and other
essential nutrients required for the respective age group, gender and
physiological stage in accordance with the guidelines made by the Indian
Council of Medical Research”.
The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), in its doping violation report
for 2015, ranked India third after the Russian Federation and Italy. In
2015, 117 athletes failed to clear dope tests.
The Indian government had, in 2013, drafted the National Sports
Development Bill that highlighted elimination of doping practices. As
per a 27 April report in the Indian Express, the government has been
working on a new legislation to make doping by athletes a criminal
offence and the proposed law could include coaches, manufacturers and
suppliers of these products.
No comments:
Post a Comment