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Bill banning ingredients in Oklahoma foods garners advancement

Bill banning ingredients in Oklahoma foods garners advancement

Yahoo03-03-2025

Brian Horak walks down an aisle at Post 60 Market in Emerson, Neb. (Photo by Kevin Hardy/Statel
OKLAHOMA CITY – A legislative panel on Monday passed a bill that would bar synthetic dyes and over a dozen other ingredients from food, despite concerns it could drive up prices and amounts to government overreach.
Senate Bill 4, by Sen. Kristen Thompson, R-Edmond, would ban 21 ingredients from food. The measure includes aspartame, an artificial sweetener, and sodium nitrate, a preservative. It requires a warning label disclosing all chemical food additives.
Manufacturers who fail to comply with the ban, which takes effect Jan, 15, 2027, would face administrative penalties, with the funds going to school food programs.
It also applies to ingestable medications beginning Jan. 18, 2028.
Sen. David Bullard questioned if the measure
creates more government regulation for private businesses.
Thompson said the Food and Drug Administration let companies self determine if the ingredients are generally safe.
'My argument here is that it is not over regulation,' Thompson said. 'This is just the beginning of food safety and regulating unsafe chemicals in our products.'
Businesses will have almost two years to reformulate if needed, she said.
'This is our first swing at this and it is a big one,' she said.
West Virginia approved a statewide ban Friday, and California has done it for school lunches, Thompson said.
Legislation to implement additive bans has been filed in Missouri, Illinois Pennsylvania, New York, Iowa, Maryland, Oregon, South Dakota and Rhode Island, she said.
'So this is absolutely a nationwide movement,' she said, adding that if states ban together the FDA will be forced to take action.
'This is the right thing to do, not only for our kids but for all of Oklahoma,' Thompson said.
She said Oklahoma's proposed list of banned ingredients is the most robust in the country.
She expects the measure to have far reaching effects, but believes the state's poor health outcomes will improve.
Sen. Casey Murdock, R-Felt, asked if lawmakers were telling Oklahomans what they can and cannot buy.
The state was not banning food, but is not going to allow 'poisonous chemicals' in foods, Thompson said.
Sen. Carri Hicks, D-Oklahoma City, said she would support the measure Monday but had concerns that the cost would be passed on to consumers and could increase food insecurity.
Title was stricken on the bill, a procedural move to slow it down in the legislative process.
It passed by a vote of 10-1 and heads to the Senate floor for possible consideration. Murdock, chairman of the Senate Agriculture and Wildlife Committee, voted against the bill.
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'Gas station heroin' is technically illegal and widely available. Here are the facts
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WASHINGTON (AP) — Health officials want you to think twice before buying one of those brightly colored little bottles often sold at gas stations, convenience stores and smoke shops. Sometimes called 'gas station heroin,' the products are usually marketed as energy shots or cognitive supplements but actually contain tianeptine, an unapproved drug that can be addictive and carries risks of serious side effects. U.S. poison control centers have reported a steady rise in calls linked to the drug for more than a decade. And last month the Food and Drug Administration sent a warning to health professionals about 'the magnitude of the underlying danger or these products.' Here's what to know about gas station heroin. How are these products sold in the U.S.? Tianeptine is approved in a number foreign countries as an antidepressant, usually as a low-dose pill taken three times a day. But it has never been approved by the FDA for any medical condition in the U.S. Additionally, the drug cannot legally be added to foods and beverages or sold as a dietary supplement — something the FDA has repeatedly warned U.S. companies about. Still, under-the-radar firms sell tianeptine in various formulas, often with brand names like Zaza, Tianaa, Pegasus and TD Red. Although that is technically illegal, the FDA does not preapprove ingredients added to supplements and beverages. 'It's kind of this grey area of consumer products, or supplements, where the contents are not regulated or tested the way they would be with a medication,' said Dr. Diane Calello of the New Jersey Poison Information and Education System. Last year, Calello and her colleagues published a study documenting a cluster of emergency calls in New Jersey tied to a flavored elixir called Neptune's Fix. People experienced distress, rapid heartbeat, low blood pressure and seizures after drinking it. More than a dozen of the 20 patients had to be admitted for intensive care. Why use these products? Many tianeptine products claim— without evidence or FDA approval— to help users treat medical conditions, including addiction, pain and depression. In 2018, the FDA issued a warning letter to the maker of a product called Tianna, which claimed to provide 'an unparalleled solution to cravings for opiates.' While tianeptine is not an opioid, the drug binds to some of the same receptors in the brain, which can temporarily produce effects akin to oxycodone and other opioids. Tianeptine also carries some of the same physiological risks of opioids, including the potential to dangerously depress breathing. 'That's what tends to get people into trouble,' said Dr. Hannah Hays of Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio. 'They use it for opioid-like effects or to self-treat opioid withdrawal and that can lead to slow breathing and problems like that." People dealing with opioid addiction, pain, depression, anxiety and other conditions should see a health professional to get a prescription for FDA-approved treatments, Hays said. Is tianeptine use going up? Experts aren't sure but national figures show a big rise in emergency calls involving the drug. Calls to poison control centers increased 525% between 2018 and 2023, according to a data analysis published earlier this year. In about 40% of cases, the person had to seek medical care, with more than half of them needing critical care. One explanation for the rise in calls is simply that more Americans are using the products. But experts also say that the products are triggering more emergencies as they become more potent and dangerous. And the researchers in New Jersey who analyzed Neptune's Fix found that the liquid also contained synthetic cannabis and other drugs. 'You never quite know what's in that bottle," Calello said. 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But after the state restricted tianeptine in 2021 calls began modestly decreasing while calls across other southern states continued to climb. ___ The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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