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Of the 1,460 supplement firms in business when the rules were adopted, FDA said more than half were small, with less than 20 employees and median annual revenue of less than $1 million. Another 526 had 20 to 500 workers and median annual sales of $5 million to $10 million. That leaves 160 large companies, with 500 or more employees and sales over $10 million a year, said McGuffin, who was on a panel advising FDA on the rules.
"Responsible companies put in very strict" manufacturing practices voluntarily, before the FDA acted, said NBTY's president, Harvey Kamil. His company makes 50 billion capsules and tablets a year, plus extracts, aromatherapies and nutrition bars. It sells mostly to mass-market retailers who want to see certifications and "seals of approval" by the Natural Products Association and other such groups that set quality-control standards, he said.
The Pharma giant Wyeth makes Centrum and other supplements, and Bayer HealthCare of aspirin fame makes the One A Day line. Unilever, Novartis, GlaxoSmithKline and other big pharmaceutical firms also make or sell supplements.
"They're moving into more and more of these products," said Steven Mister, president of the trade group, Council for Responsible Nutrition.
Big companies may be more likely to make a product that is pure and contains what it claims because "they have more to lose" by selling something that's inferior, said Dr. Tod Cooperman, president of ConsumerLab.com, a testing service.
However, size does not guarantee quality. Big companies are more likely to seek out bulk ingredient suppliers in less developed countries, said Jana Hildreth of the Analytical Research Collective, a group of scientists advocating better supplement testing.
"They're going to demand lower prices, and with the prices they demand comes lower quality. You basically get what you pay for," she said.
The bottom line: "Consumers need to be cautious," Cooperman said. "To get into the game doesn't take very much. Anyone can sell a pill."
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On the Net:
Council for Responsible Nutrition:
http://www.crnusa.org/
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Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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