Food and Drugs Act

The Food and Drugs Act (French: Loi sur les aliments et drogues) is an act of the Parliament of Canada regarding the production, import, export, transport across provinces and sale of food, drugs, contraceptive devices and cosmetics (including personal cleaning products such as soap and toothpaste). It was first passed in 1920 and most recently revised in 1985. It attempts to ensure that these products are safe, that their ingredients are disclosed and that drugs are effective and are not sold as food or cosmetics. It also states that cures for disease listed in Schedule A (including cancer, obesity, anxiety, asthma, depression, appendicitis, and sexually transmitted diseases), cannot be advertised to the general public.

Food and Drugs Act
Parliament of Canada
Long title
  • An Act respecting food, drugs, cosmetics and therapeutic devices
    Loi concernant les aliments, drogues, cosmétiques et instruments thérapeutiques
CitationR.S.C. 1985, c. F-27
Amended by
Budget Implementation Act, 2023
Status: Amended
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