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Center for Veterinary Medicine

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Center for Veterinary Medicine
Agency overview
Agency executive
  • Steven Solomon, DVM, Director
Parent agencyFood and Drug Administration
Websitewww.fda.gov/animal-veterinary

The Center for Veterinary Medicine (CVM) is a branch of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) that regulates the manufacture and distribution of food, food additives, and drugs that will be given to animals. These include animals from which human foods are derived, as well as food additives and drugs for pets or companion animals. CVM is responsible for regulating drugs, devices, and food additives given to, or used on, over one hundred million companion animals, plus millions of poultry, cattle, swine, and minor animal species. Minor animal species include animals other than cattle, swine, chickens, turkeys, horses, dogs, and cats.

CVM monitors the safety of animal foods and medications. Much of the center's work focuses on animal medications used in food animals to ensure that significant drug residues are not present in the meat or other products from these animals.

Dr. Steven Solomon, DVM, is currently the Director of CVM.[1] He succeeded Tracey Forfa, who had been acting director for a few months.[2] The previous director was Dr. Bernadette Dunham; she served as Director from 2008–2016.[2]

CVM does not regulate vaccines for animals; these are handled by the United States Department of Agriculture[3]

The Bureau of Veterinary Medicine was set up by the FDA in 1965.[4] It was renamed as the Center for Veterinary Medicine in 1984.[4]

Mission and vision

The mission of the Center is "protecting human and animal health" and the vision of the organization is "Excellence. Innovation. Leadership."[5] The organization works across multiple disciplines to promote public health.

Office structure

The Center for Veterinary Medicine is divided into six key offices.

The Office of the Director coordinates activities for the Center and establishes policy in a wide variety of areas, including management, research, and compliance.[6] It directs the planning, programming, budgeting, and administrative support for the Center. The Office of the Director is also responsible for approving New Animal Drug Applications and Abbreviated New Animal Drug Applications, approving the use of animal food additives, and reviewing submitted New Animal Drug Applications for effects on human health.[6] The Director serves as the spokesperson for the Center's activities and is in contact with the public, industry, other government agencies, national organizations, and international organizations.

The Office of Management provides customer service, guidance, and education on the activities of the Center.[7] Individuals in this office are in charge of managing strategic planning of the Center's goals and priorities and serve as liaisons for specific facilities, programs, and services provided by the Center. This office is also in charge of managing billing, information management and technology, talent development, and budget planning for the Center.[7]

The Office of New Animal Drug Evaluation reviews information submitted by drug sponsors who are working to gain approval to manufacture and market animal drugs.[8] This office determines if an animal drug should be approved and ensures that the new drug meets four pillars: the drug product must be safe for both animals and humans, must be effective for its intended use, must be a quality manufactured product, and must be properly labeled with how to safely use, store, and handle the drug.[8] This office also ensures that these standards are maintained after the drug enters the marketplace. The office has eight divisions which each evaluate a different part of the drug review process.[8]

The Office of Surveillance and Compliance is in charge of regulating animal drugs and devices for their safety and effectiveness and also oversees animal food safety programs.[9] Members of this office include veterinarians, animal scientists, toxicologists, consumer safety officers, and other scientists. The Office helps inspect products, analyze samples of products, and reviews products that may be imported into the United States.[9] The Office conducts education and outreach about compliance, helps monitor adverse events and identify safety issues with animal drugs, animal food, and animal devices. The Office works to prevent and address any animal food hazards. If any safety concerns are found, this Office can issue product safety alerts, packaging label changes, recalls, or can withdrawal a product's approval.[9]

The Office of Research helps to develop new procedures for analyzing drugs, food additives, and contaminants.[10] The Office works to investigate how drugs are absorbed, distributed, metabolized, and excreted, and how different drugs impact the immunology or physiology of animals. This office also helps develop screening tests for foodborne diseases and screens for drug residues in food products. The Office is involved in many scientific areas of research including veterinary medicine, animal science, biology, chemistry, microbiology, epidemiology, and pharmacology.[10] The building that houses this Office is equipped with laboratories, animal facilities, and has specialized experimental equipment to conduct research.

The Office of Minor Use and Minor Species is the smallest office within the Center and handles "minor use" drugs, which are those that are intended for use in horses, dogs, cats, cattle, pigs, turkey, and chickens but are for diseases that do not occur very frequently, only impact a small geographic area, or are only impacted a small number of animals each year.[11][12] This Office also handles issues pertaining to "minor species" which include animals such as zoo animals, parrots, ferrets, guinea pigs, sheep, goats, and honeybees.[11] This Office establishes and maintains the Index of Legally Marketed Unapproved New Animal Drugs for Minor Species.[12] Outreach and education is also a significant part of this Office's activities.

Sources

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Department of Health and Human Services.

References

  1. ^ Commissioner, Office of the. "FDA Organization - Meet Dr. Steven Solomon, Director, Center for Veterinary Medicine". www.fda.gov. Retrieved 2019-04-05.
  2. ^ a b "Solomon is new FDA CVM director". American Veterinary Medical Association. February 15, 2017. Retrieved 30 June 2019.
  3. ^ Hill, R.E.,Jr.; Foley, P.L.; Clough, N.E.; Ludemann, L.R.; Murtle, D.C. (2013). "Translating Research into Licensed Vaccines and Validated and Licensed Diagnostic Tests". In Roth, J.A.; Richt, J.A.; Morozov, I.A. (eds.). Vaccines and diagnostics for transboundary animal diseases : Ames, Iowa, 17-19 September 2012. Karger Medical and Scientific Publishers. pp. 53–54. ISBN 9783318023664.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ a b Plumlee, Konnie (2004). "Chapter 5. Regulatory toxicology". Clinical Veterinary Toxicology. Mosby. p. 29. ISBN 9780323011259.
  5. ^ Medicine, Center for Veterinary (2020-10-07). "CVM Vision and Mission". FDA. Retrieved 2021-05-23.
  6. ^ a b Medicine, Center for Veterinary (2020-10-07). "Office of the Director". FDA. Retrieved 2021-05-23.
  7. ^ a b Medicine, Center for Veterinary (2020-10-29). "Office of Management". FDA. Retrieved 2021-05-23.
  8. ^ a b c Medicine, Center for Veterinary (2021-02-08). "Office of New Animal Drug Evaluation". FDA. Retrieved 2021-05-23.
  9. ^ a b c Medicine, Center for Veterinary (2021-04-15). "Office of Surveillance and Compliance". FDA. Retrieved 2021-05-23.
  10. ^ a b Medicine, Center for Veterinary (2020-09-02). "Office of Research". FDA. Retrieved 2021-05-23.
  11. ^ a b Medicine, Center for Veterinary (2021-02-16). "Minor Use/Minor Species". FDA. Retrieved 2021-05-23.
  12. ^ a b Medicine, Center for Veterinary (2021-02-16). "Office of Minor Use and Minor Species". FDA. Retrieved 2021-05-23.