Our Impact
The work of the National Consumers League is making a difference in people’s lives across the country. Meet some of the consumers touched by our programs.
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Preventing yet another victim
Paige, 55, a Nashville wife and mother of two, answered an employment ad for secret shoppers. Before sending payment to the scammers, she reached out to NCL.
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Building a stronger generation
A grease fire flared up in Decklan’s kitchen. As his family scrambled and panicked, fearing that the whole house might erupt in flames, Decklan remained calm. He hurried over to the pantry, grabbed some baking soda, and dumped it on the fire quickly extinguishing the blaze.
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Script Your Future saved my life
Cincinnati resident Charles, 45, lost his computer business — and health insurance— during a time of economic downturn. A diabetic, Charles was now unable to afford his medication. He stopped taking it which made him seriously ill and put his life at risk.
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For a safer workplace
Jeremy is a fast-food worker who has been employed at a number of Chipotle restaurants in New York City. When he was just 20 years old, he took part in an NCL research project that revealed that management practices within the fast food chain were putting workers—and food safety for customers—at risk.
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Regulation Matters
Although the shortage of branded GLP-1 drugs is over, it is likely that the infodemic of disinformation about these drugs will continue.
Why? Because more needs to be done at the federal and state levels to ensure it is safe to buy compounded drugs online.
The problem involves a two-tiered system of drug regulation in the US. At the federal level, the Food and Drug Administration has primary responsibility for regulating manufactured drugs and large-scale drug compounding facilities registered with FDA. In the states, the board of pharmacy licenses state pharmacies, including compounders, and has day-to-day oversight of their operations.
When this becomes complicated is during times of drug shortages, such as the shortage of GLP-1 weight loss drugs, when the need for coordination and aggressive enforcement is especially important. This is why advocacy organizations are calling for the responsible regulation of compounding pharmacies to ensure patient safety and access to safe, compounded drugs.
At the state level, this means more oversight by boards of pharmacy to confirm the safety standards and regulations regarding compounding are enforced. It also means requiring pharmacies to follow FDA rules for when compounding drug products are allowed during a shortage and to report adverse events to identify possible quality and safety problems.
At the federal level, advocates and many state attorneys generals are urging FDA to ramp up enforcement against counterfeiters and online retailers illegally directly selling the active ingredients in GLP-1 to consumers without a prescription, supposedly for “research purposes.” Additionally, members of Congress have called on FDA to apply existing laws and regulations to online sellers of GLP-1 drugs that prohibit false or misleading claims in pharmaceutical advertising promotion, including deceptive images and text that omits safety or side effect information.