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FDA to Revoke Authorization for the Use of Red No. 3 in Food and Ingested Drugs

Food And Drug Administration
Constituent Update
January 15, 2025

The FDA is revoking the authorization for the use of FD&C Red No. 3 as a matter of law, based on the Delaney Clause of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FD&C Act). The FDA is amending its color additive regulations to no longer allow for the use of FD&C Red No. 3 in food and ingested drugs in response to a 2022 color additive petition. The petition requested the agency review whether the Delaney Clause applied and cited, among other data and information, two studies that showed cancer in laboratory male rats exposed to high levels of FD&C Red No. 3 due to a rat specific hormonal mechanism. The way that FD&C Red No. 3 causes cancer in male rats does not occur in humans. Relevant exposure levels to FD&C Red No. 3 for humans are typically much lower than those that cause the effects shown in male rats. Studies in other animals and in humans did not show these effects; claims that the use of FD&C Red No. 3 in food and in ingested drugs puts people at risk are not supported by the available scientific information.

The Delaney Clause, enacted in 1960 as part of the Color Additives Amendment to the FD&C Act, prohibits FDA authorization of a food additive or color additive if it has been found to induce cancer in humans or animals. This is not the first time the agency revoked an authorization based on the Delaney Clause. For example, in 2018, the FDA revoked the authorization for certain synthetic flavors based on the Delaney Clause in response to a food additive petition.

FD&C Red No. 3 is a synthetic food dye that gives foods and drinks a bright, cherry-red color. The FDA estimates that FD&C Red No. 3 is not as widely used in food and drugs when compared to other certified colors based on information available in third-party food product labeling databases, food manufacturers’ websites and other public information, and the FDA’s certification data. FD&C Red No. 3 has been primarily used in certain food products, such as candy, cakes and cupcakes, cookies, frozen desserts, and frostings and icings, as well as certain ingested drugs.

Manufacturers who use FD&C Red No. 3 in food and ingested drugs will have until January 15, 2027 or January 18, 2028, respectively, to reformulate their products. Other countries still currently allow for certain uses of FD&C Red No. 3 (called erythrosine in other countries). However, foods imported to the U.S. must comply with U.S. requirements.


 
So red dye seems to cause cancer in Animals....

Expect Hot Cheetos to come Green now 🤣

And does this also apply to beef? 🥩
When you buy beef you are attracted to the beautiful red appearance of the beef, but that's not blood from the beef meat.
Butchers use a red dye on beef to make it's appearance more attractive to the consumer, but remove the red dye and you have meat that has a dingy grey appearance, not so attractive.

What about vitamins like Ferrous Sulfate, Iron?
It typically comes in red, no doubt a red dye is used when the iron is made into pill form.

And awww Hawaiian Punch isn't the same it you take away the red. Some people will not be happy and when they see their favorite drink only in blue, they will say
How would you like a Hawaiian Punch 👊 🤣

Red dye has shown to cause cancer in Animals, but the research does not say it definitively causes cancer to humans.
How about the FDA ban something proven to be harmful for humans....
Like the mRNA?
 
I'm not sure that's exactly true. I do think beef, like tuna, can be gassed with carbon monoxide which bonds with the myoglobulin which becomes red on exposure to oxygen, the CO gas keeps it red longer, but it's not dyed as far as I know.
I learned about the red dye in beef from a Butcher.
I wouldn't have known if that Butcher hadn't told me this when I commented on how bloody some of the packaged beef looked.
 
Buy beef local from a farmer and Amish markets where they let their cows roam free and eat grass > the beef is a beautiful natural red. The taste is truly a treat from God!

Stay away from the market beef where they feed cows cheap grain, and growth hormones while crammed in a warehouse. that likely leads to the grey beef needing red dye. It’s all about mass production and profit.

I wish it didn’t take me until after Covid to understand all this evilness about US food.

Should have been an organic food believer long ago. God certainly gave me the brains!
 
It's amazing how much healthier my parents were when I cleaned up their diet.
They looked at least 10 years younger and stopped having to use a bunch of OTC all the time.
If I don't eat clean, there are"consequences."

Interesting to look at the differences in appearance between the grass-fed, pasture-raised, and regular beef in the WF meat service case.

Other than something like organic chicken, frozen organic cornish game hens, or an organic turkey, I don't buy pre-packaged meat or poultry. Unless it's grass-fed from local farmers/ranchers that was packaged in the store by the local co-op or I'm at the farmer/rancher's individual store.
 
I wish they'd get rid of all the artificial colors, sweeteners, and flavors.

and no-name "natural flavors" and "natural colors."

and all the GMO/bioengineered ingredients.


It's getting really hard to buy food that doesn't make me sick. Lately, I've developed a light celiac rash sometimes, and it's always after I've eaten something non-organic and known/strongly suspected of containing GMO/bioengineered wheat :furious: :mad: :apost: :ban: I never ever had this problem with organic or the old regular wheat, but this GMO/bioengineered stuff is a giant problem. There's so much GMO/bioengineered wheat that it's extremely difficult to find organic or non-GMO bread/pasta products, and what I can find almost always has rancid seed oils, canola oil, soy, sugar, lactose, lactic acid, dairy, or "natural flavors," which often include soy, lactose, bugs, etc. There's cross-allery between fish/shellfish and some bugs, lactose and lactic acid don't have to be listed as dairy or milk, and soy is a potent phytoestrogen. :furious: :mad: :apost: :ban:
 
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