Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 61N-1.007 - Compressed Medical Gases
(1) Each
compressed medical gases manufacturer or medical oxygen retailer who
manufactures or refills compressed medical gases must comply with the current
good manufacturing practice regulations for drug products promulgated by the
FDA in 21 C.F.R. Parts 200-299 and the "Compressed Medical Gases Guideline"
issued by the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, FDA in February 1989,
which are incorporated by reference herein. Deviations from these requirements
authorized in writing by the FDA will be recognized by the department when
determining compliance with current good manufacturing practices for compressed
medical gases.
(2) Each compressed
medical gases manufacturer or medical oxygen retailer that refills tanks must
establish and follow detailed written procedures covering: production and
process controls; training; prefill, fill and post-fill operations; analytical
testing; labeling procedures; calibration and maintenance of equipment;
distribution; testing and approval or rejection of drug product containers and
closures; recall procedures; recordkeeping; and complaint files.
(3) Labels and Labeling. In those instances
where the FDA has not promulgated a final regulation related to labeling of a
compressed medical gas, the label must include the general requirements of:
name and address of the manufacturer or distributor; established name of the
gas; contents in terms of the volume of gas in liters or cubic feet at
specified temperature and 1 atmosphere of pressure; lot number; statement of
ingredients (for mixtures); directions for use statement; applicable warning
statements; and the prescription statement. Although oxygen intended to treat a
medical condition is regarded as a prescription drug, the FDA has not objected
to emergency use oxygen being marketed without a prescription. If Oxygen U.S.P.
is sold for emergency use, then the label is required to contain the statement:
"For emergency use only when administered by properly trained personnel for
oxygen deficiency and resuscitation. For all other medical applications,
prescription statement". The prescription statement is "Rx Only" or the
prescription symbol followed by the word "Only." All prescription medical
oxygen must also include the following:
(a) If
the container is disposable, the label must bear the statement "Disposable
Container. Federal Law Prohibits Refilling. Do Not Puncture or Discard
Container into Fire or Incinerator."
(b) If the container is non-disposable and
may be refilled, the label must bear the statement "Federal Law Requires that
this Container be Refilled with Oxygen U.S.P. Only by Establishments Registered
as a Drug Producer in accordance with the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic
Act."
(c) A statement whether the
oxygen was produced by the air-liquefaction process;
(d) The warning statement shall be: "Warning
- uninterrupted use of high concentrations of oxygen for more than five hours
may be harmful. Do not attempt to use on patients who have stopped breathing,
unless used in conjunction with resuscitative equipment. Keep Out of Reach of
Children. Contents under high pressure and can vigorously accelerate
combustion. Keep free from oil and grease. Do not use or store near heat or
open flame and use only with equipment conditioned for oxygen
service."
Notes
Rulemaking Authority 499.05, 499.85 FS. Law Implemented 499.006, 499.007, 499.013, 499.81, 499.83, 499.91 FS.
New 7-1-96, Formerly 10D-45.0442, Amended 1-26-99, 1-1-04, Formerly 64F-12.007.
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.