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Food Labeling: Health Claims; Soluble Fiber From Certain Foods and Risk of Coronary Heart Disease

other · Food and Drug Administration · Rule · Published 2008-02-25 · Effective 2008-02-25 · 73 FR 9938

Document

Document number
E8-3418
Federal Register citation
73 FR 9938
CFR reference
21 CFR 101
Type
Rule
Action
Interim final rule.
Category
other
Sub-agency
Food and Drug Administration
Publication date
2008-02-25
Effective date
2008-02-25
HHS docket
Docket No. FDA-2008-P-0090

Abstract

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is amending the health claim regulation entitled "Soluble fiber from certain foods and risk of coronary heart disease (CHD)" to add barley betafiber as an additional eligible source of beta-glucan soluble fiber. Barley betafiber is the ethanol precipitated soluble fraction of cellulase and alpha-amylase hydrolyzed whole grain barley flour. FDA is taking this action in response to a health claim petition submitted by Cargill, Inc. FDA previously concluded that there was significant scientific agreement that a claim characterizing the relationship between beta- glucan soluble fiber of certain whole oat and whole grain barley products and CHD risk is supported by the totality of publicly available scientific evidence. Based on the totality of publicly available scientific evidence, FDA now has concluded that in addition to certain whole oat and whole grain barley products, barley betafiber is also an appropriate source of beta-glucan soluble fiber. Therefore, FDA is amending the health claim regulation entitled "Soluble fiber from certain foods and risk of CHD" to include barley betafiber as another eligible source of beta-glucan soluble fiber.

Source

Authoritative
Federal Register document
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