Unregistered food supplements pose safety threat, FDA warns
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a warning on Monday, Nov. 6, to both healthcare professionals and the general public, strongly advising against the purchase and consumption of an unregistered food supplement.

Among the unregistered food supplements that are “not considered safe,” the FDA said, is the "Cara Slim Korea Slim."
The FDA, responsible for ensuring public health and safety, has conducted comprehensive online monitoring and post-marketing surveillance, leading to the discovery that the abovementioned food supplement has “not been registered.”
Under Republic Act No. 9711, otherwise known as the "FDA Act of 2009," the agency reiterated that the manufacture, importation, exportation, sale, offering for sale, distribution, transfer, non-consumer use, promotion, advertising, or sponsorship of health products without the proper authorization is prohibited.
Since these food products did not undergo an evaluation process, the FDA said it could not ensure their quality and safety.
Meanwhile, it warned all concerned establishments not to distribute, advertise, or sell these "violative food supplement" until they obtain the required Product Notification Certificate. (Zekinah Elize Espina)