EFSA's Lower Safe Intake Level For Selenium Stands Despite Supplement Industry’s Objections

The European Food Safety Authority has rejected a request from industry association Food Supplements Europe to apply its new lower intake limit for selenium to only selenomethionine and not other forms authorized for use in supplements.

• Source: Shutterstock

The European Food Safety Authority’s new lower Tolerable Upper Intake Level (UL) for selenium will apply to all forms of the mineral when used in dietary supplements despite protests from industry.

Following publication of EFSA’s draft scientific opinion on a new UL for selenium – reducing it from 300 μg/day to...

Read the full article – start your free trial today!

Join thousands of industry professionals who rely on HBW Insight for daily insights

  • Start your 7-day free trial
  • Explore trusted news, analysis, and insights
  • Access comprehensive global coverage
  • Enjoy instant access – no credit card required

More from Europe

AESGP Annual Meeting: Commission Must ‘Think Carefully’ Before Reverse-Switching Antimicrobials

 
• By 

If the European Commission is serious about improving the competitiveness of the European Union, it should ditch the idea of making commonly used OTC antimicrobials like thrush treatments and cold sore creams prescription-only, warns Greek Medicines Agency president Evangelos Manolopoulos

AESGP Annual Meeting: Wastewater Directive Impact Assessment ‘Fundamentally Flawed’

 
• By 

AESGP president Jonathan Workman opens the 61st Annual Meeting with calls for industry unity in the face of the problematic revised EU Urban Wastewater Treatment Directive.

Over The Counter: Driving Innovation In France’s Self-Care Market, With NèreS’ Luc Besançon

 
• By 

HBW Insight speaks to NèreS' executive director Luc Besançon about the key issues facing France's self-care industry, especially Rx-to-OTC switch and the revised Urban Wastewater Treatment Directive.

‘We Must Have The Truth’ – Calls For UWWTD Review Intensify As Evidence Looks ‘Shaky’

 
• By 

The evidence underpinning the “polluter pays” principle of the revised Urban Wastewater Treatment Directive - which calls on Europe's pharmaceutical industry to cough up at least 80% of the cost of updating wastewater treatment facilities - is looking increasingly shaky, according to a new report.

More from Geography

IQVIA Consumer Health: Digestive Category Driving Global OTC Market Growth

 
• By 

An increasing awareness of and interest in gut health helped the global OTC market grow by 4.6% in value terms in 2024, according to IQVIA Consumer Health.

Self-Care Must Be Central To NHS Reform, Says UK Industry And Pharmacy Alliance

 
• By 

Ahead of a soon to be released 10-Year Health Plan for the English NHS, an alliance including PAGB calls for self-care to be “clearly recognised and supported through concrete policies that reflect its vital role in achieving the plan’s goals.”

Value Of Consumer Wearables Within The Clinic Currently Unknown, Says Cardiologist

 

“It’s quite likely [consumer wearable manufacturers] are changing the sensitivity and specificity based on consumer feedback, but not for medical reasons,” said Dipak Kotecha, a University of Birmingham professor of cardiology. Often, self-reported performance evidence from manufacturers is “low quality and biased.”