Essay Topic Hub

Fda
Essays

773+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

773 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

The Food and Drug Administration is a federal regulatory agency responsible for overseeing the safety and efficacy of drugs, medical devices, food products, and biological therapies sold in the United States. Students across public administration, health policy, pre-law, business, and life sciences courses write about the FDA because it sits at the intersection of government authority, industry interests, and patient welfare. Its approval processes, enforcement powers, and evolving scope — particularly as new product categories like gene therapy and biotechnology emerge — make it a rich subject for examining how administrative agencies function within the broader regulatory state.

The papers archived on this topic reflect several distinct approaches. Many focus on the FDA's regulatory role in biotechnology, examining how the agency applies existing frameworks to rapidly advancing fields such as gene therapy and genetically modified organisms. Others take an organizational or strategic lens, analyzing the FDA as a complex administrative body with wide-ranging divisions and responsibilities. Policy-focused papers assess the approval process for medical devices and drugs, often arguing that current procedures either move too slowly to serve patients or move too quickly to ensure safety. Some papers approach the topic from a business or environmental-scan perspective, treating FDA regulation as an external force shaping market strategy.

A strong essay on the FDA needs a tightly scoped thesis — arguing a specific position about a particular regulatory process, product category, or policy gap rather than describing the agency in general terms. Evidence drawn from regulatory statutes, approval data, and documented case outcomes carries the most weight. A common pitfall is conflating the FDA's authority over drugs with its separate, distinct framework for medical devices or biologics, which can undermine an otherwise well-developed argument.

773 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Food and drug law in biotechnology
Would the enactment of the DSHEA have changed the outcome in Nutrilab Inc. v. Schweiker, 713 F.2d 335 (1983)? Assume the manufacturer promoted the product as helping to maintain a healthy weight.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Label Drug Use Useless, Costly
In November, 2003, the Knight-Ridder news service conducted an investigation on a practice called "off-label prescribing (Devitt 2006)." It found that doctors wrote up to 115 million prescriptions per year for drugs for…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Ephedrine abuse among athletes
The use of nutritional and dietary supplements continues to be on the rise among the youths of the nation. Herbal dietary supplements such as ephedrine, ginseng, etc., are particularly common among athletes and college…
Paper Doctorate
Red Bull Life\'s Better Without Wings: Red
It is difficult to imagine walking into a convenience store, gas station shop, or other such establishment without being almost immediately confronted by a refrigerator case full of the aluminum cans and colorful tabs of the many different brands of "energy drinks." These drinks, with such brand names as Monster and Rock Star, purport to give a jolt of energy to the system, presumably allowing one to have "monster" levels of energy or act like a "rock star" no matter how tired they were moments earlier. One of
Paper Undergraduate
Comparative analysis of 3M, Procter & Gamble, and General Electric
As the leading provider of consumer, commercial and institutional soap, cleansers, and packaged goods, Procter & Gamble (P&G) (NYSE:PG) has chosen to take a global leadership position in the areas of sustainability and environmental effectiveness. The cornerstone of the strategic initiatives is the development of a thorough methodology for assessing, analyzing, measuring, and reporting corporate-wide performance to sustainability goals and guidelines. P&G has isolated the greatest potential risks to their sustainability objectives as being in their globally-based supply chain (Warner, 2008). To gain greater insights into how they can alleviate the significant risk associated with suppliers, who if not well managed could jeopardize the entire series of strategic initiatives surrounding sustainability, P&G created the Supplier Environmental Sustainability Scorecard (P&G, 2010a). The methodology behind this scorecard form the basis of measurement, assessment and reporting systems within P&G today and have since been emulated by other suppliers as well, as their results are quantifiable (Richardson, 2005). Previous to the scorecard being defined, P&G often relied on a wide range of metrics, scorecards and analytics platforms that were never in sync with one another, often causing less-than-optimal levels of quality to be attained (P&G, 2010). There was also a significant level of siloed operations going on, as P&G operates across more than 130 counties and dominates the top-of-mind awareness levels in each national and global market those choose to compete in. While P&G is best known for its marketing prowess, its supply chain and quality management operations, and now its sustainability initiatives, have gained it significant traction in global markets (Joseph, 2010). According to the latest annual reports from P&G, the global soap and cleaning compound manufacturing industry is valued at $54.7B in 2011, growing at a relative flat 3.7% compound annual growth rate through 2012. P&G holds a commanding share in this industry globally, challenged by well-known brands including Colgate-Palmolive, Ecolab and S.C. Johnson, in addition to a few more dozen smaller competitors scattered across geographic regions. P&G competes across many sub-segments of the consumer and commercial cleaning markets, personal care, personal and commercial soap in addition to consumer packaged goods. Of their many lines of business however, P&G faces the toughest challenges in the areas of government regulation and continued government monitoring of environmental performance in the chemically-based production processes it has. Of the several agencies that routinely monitor and at times even fine P&G if they do not comply with government requirements, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is often the most rigorous and thorough in their assessments (Joseph, 2010). The costs of non-compliance for P&G can be in the tens of millions of dollars and can also significantly slow down a new product introduction process as well (Warner, 2008). A lack of quality management is such a significant risk for the company that they have chosen to attack it as an opportunity to gain greater lean manufacturing and process workflows into their company. This more aggressive stance on quality management has helped to save the company literally millions of dollars in fines while also setting the foundation for greater performance gains through its green and sustainability-based initiatives globally (P&G, 2010). P&G has also appointed a Vice President of SustainAbility who has the primary role of ensuring all sustainability initiatives and programs are coordinated and work towards the strategic objectives the company has (Joseph, 2010). Not satisfied with the role being within a functional area, P&G has elevated this position to report directly to the CEO, creating a position that has oversight of nearly 75,000 suppliers globally. P&G has also given this person direct accountability for the performance of each product division and brand to the Supplier Environmental Sustainability Scorecards mentioned in this analysis. The integration of metrics, key performance indicators (KPIs) and the use of corporate-wide and by-division Supplier Environmental Sustainability Scorecards has helped P&G surpass even its own expectations and led to sustainability objectives being achieved (Warner, 2008). The remainder of this analysis includes an assessment of the progress P&G is making on their sustainable business objectives, an analysis of the measurement methods they are using and reporting including the Supplier Environmental Sustainability Scorecard, in addition to a series of recommendations and a conclusion.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Prescription Drug Abuse Into All
¶ … Prescription Drug Abuse Into All Drug-Education Programs
Research Paper Undergraduate
Cranberries (Vaccinium Macrocarpon) Are Indigenous
cranberries (Vaccinium macrocarpon) are indigenous to North America and have been used in traditional Native American medicine for centuries if not millennia. Related to blueberries and rhododendrons, the North American…
Paper Masters
Coca-Cola Company: Environmental and Industry Analysis
Coca Cola is one of the global top producers of soft drinks with headquarter in the Atlanta, United States.Coca Cola produces non-alcoholic beverages and operates in several countries such as Great Britain, Belgium, France, Luxemburg, Netherlands, Sweden and Norway.Fundamental long-term strategy of Coca Cola is its marketing expertise and brands differentiation to increase consumer awareness. Analysis of Coca Cola reveals that the company is enjoying huge economic of scale making Coca Cola to record huge profits yearly. Despite the opportunities that the company is enjoying, Coca Cola is facing several threats such as intense competitions, government regulations, and power of buyers within the industry.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Mercury in Seafood Are High
Since the 1800s people have been aware that fish contain high levels of mercury (Ferguson, 2005). The harmful effects of high levels of mercury in the human body have been known for many years as well.
Paper Undergraduate
Commerce Ever Ethical? The Issue
The issue of ethics in business has become increasingly important in recent years, in particular in light of the wave of frauds and accounting scandals in the early 2000s that led to the passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.