The
Biologics Control Act was passed in the United States on
July 1,
1902 after two incidents involving the
deaths of children caused by contaminated
vaccines. The first involved
the horse named Jim whose
tetanus-contaminated
serum was used to produce a
diphtheria antitoxin that caused the deaths of thirteen children in St. Louis, Missouri. The second involved contaminated
smallpox vaccine which killed nine children in Camden, New Jersey. Both incidents were attributed to failure of proper procedures and testing by local officials. The act established the
Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER), which was placed under the authority of the
NIH by the
Public Health Service Act of 1944, and became one of the centers of the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 1972. Although it was signed with much less fanfare than the
Pure Food and Drug Act, the Biologics control act set a precedent for federal regulation of biological products.
References
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- A brief review of major accomplishments during the first 100 years of CBER
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- An overview of the incident and conditions surrounding it