Observations.(poll of public response to magazine FDA Consumer)

From: FDA Consumer | Date: May 1, 2002| Author: Formanek, Raymond, Jr. | Copyright information

Most subscribers of FDA Consumer are seeking general health information, and they read most--if not all--of every magazine issue, a recent survey indicates. Ninety-six percent of those responding to the poll say they think our writing style is just right, not too technical or too basic. About the same number say the length of articles in the magazine is appropriate.

Nearly all those who responded to the random sampling of FDA Consumer subscribers nationwide rate the publ...

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Observations.(poll of public response to magazine FDA Consumer)
FDA Consumer ; Most subscribers of FDA Consumer are seeking general health information, and they read most--if not all--of every magazine issue, a recent survey indicates. Ninety-six percent of those responding to the poll say they think our writing style is just right, not too technical or too basic. About the
OBSERVATIONS.
FDA Consumer ; This issue of FDA Consumer marks the completion of my first year as editor. It's also the last issue of FDA Consumer that I will edit. I will soon leave the Food and Drug Administration and join the National Human Genome Research Institute, a part of the National Institutes of Health. But before I
OBSERVATIONS.(FDA Consumer's mission)(Brief Article)
FDA Consumer ; The Food and Drug Administration is a rare organization within the federal government; it functions at a place where science and the law intersect. The agency's scientists and lawyers, working together with other agency regulators, make decisions that affect all Americans every day of their lives.
GPO's best selling government periodical
Library Administrator's Digest ; GPO's Superintendent of Documents Francis J. Buckley Jr. says that FDA Consumer, with almost 20,000 subscribers, is the most popular government periodical sold. GPO is the dissemination source for more than 600 periodicals from the legislative, judicial and executive branches of the government.
Corrections.(Correction Notice)
FDA Consumer ; The infographic titled How We See It that appeared on page 26 of the September-October 2001 issue of FDA Consumer needs clarification. For myopia, the cornea is either too steep and/or the eye is too long. For hyperopia, the cornea is either too flat and/or the eye is too short. A thick or thin