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FDA Threatens Ban on Alcoholic Energy Drinks
November 13, 2009

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News Summary

Alcoholic drinks that contain caffeine are facing an imminent ban by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) unless manufacturers can clearly show that the products are safe for consumers.

The New York Times reported Nov. 13 that the FDA, responding to a request from 19 state attorneys general, told 30 makers of caffeinated alcohol drinks that the agency would move to "ensure that the products are removed from the marketplace" unless the manufacturers produce evidence of their safety within the next 30 days. An FDA official said that consumption of alcoholic energy drinks has been associated with high risk for injry, drunk driving, and sexual assaults, especially among college students.

The agency noted that the use of caffeine in alcoholic beverages has never been approved by FDA.

"For many years, federal regulators have stood mutely by as these potentially dangerous products, which resemble nonalcoholic energy drinks in many ways, gained in popularity among young people," said the Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI), an alcohol-industry watchdog. "In fact, emerging research suggests that the young consumers of these products are more likely to be the perpetrator or victim of sexual aggression, to ride with an intoxicated driver or to become otherwise injured."

COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:

Posted by kat on 16 Nov 09 09:32 AM EST
I would like to see them banned. I have also noticed many stores sell the small size bottles of energy shots. Young people like them because they are small and can fit in a pocket or purse. I am told they bring them with them when going out so they can drink alcohol and not feel tired. This disturbes me. The products are not mixed in together like the alcohol energy drinks but it is another way to get the same effect.

Posted by Bill Godshall on 16 Nov 09 10:06 AM EST
Banning caffeine from drinks containing alcohol will have as much impact on public health as banning flavorings from cigarettes; zero. Drinkers Just as flavorings don't make cigarettes any more addictive or hazardous, caffeine doesn't make alcohol drinks any more addictive or hazardous. The FDA appears to be far more interested in misleading the public to make the agency look tough, while doing virtually nothing to actually reduce the disease or death toll from tobacco and alcohol. If the FDA was truly concerned about excessive consumption of alcohol by youth and young adults, the agency would restrict alcohol advertising to adults (instead of looking the other way as alcohol is aggressively advertised/marketed to youth on television and other media). Banning caffeine from drinks containing alcohol would simply result in people mixing their drinks with caffeinated soda pops or drinking a cup of coffee after consuming lots of alcohol (just as they've been doing for many decades).

Posted by Joshua on 16 Nov 09 10:16 AM EST
the dangers they list here are all risks commonly associated with any alcohol product with or without caffine, couldn't the same standard be applied to any alcohol product or cigarrettes - prove that the product is safe or take it off the market? it seems to me that if the FDA wanted to ban the products they should come up with an actual reason to do so and then ban them, rather than ask the manufacturers to meet some arbitrary and impossible standard of safety first.

Posted by Anne on 16 Nov 09 07:33 PM EST
These drinks should be banned and I am glad the FDA is working to do that. Alcohol is a depressant and mixing alcohol with a stimulant (caffeine/energy drinks) inhibits a person’s body from slowing down, passing out and sometime vomiting, which is a body’s natural defense against alcohol. With caffeinated alcoholic beverages people “think” they can drink more simply because they are awake and more alert then they would otherwise be. Because they remain awake they consume more and their BAC increases. If they do not pass out they are more likely to engage in high risk behaviors (such as drunk driving, sexual activity and possibly get alcohol poisoning, which could have otherwise been avoided. Mixing stimulants with depressants is extremely dangerous. Anyone drinking (esp. college students who are among the highest abusing population) should stay away from all stimulants if they are going to be drinking (and that includes caffeinated soda). Not to mention that carbonation in beverages thins the lining of the stomach and if a carbonated drink is alcoholic the alcohol will be absorbed faster increasing BAC levels. Alcoholic energy drinks are quite hazardous and I am surprised they have not been banned sooner.

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