Title 21 › Chapter 9— FEDERAL FOOD, DRUG, AND COSMETIC ACT › Subchapter VII— GENERAL AUTHORITY › Part A— General Administrative Provisions › § 379
The Secretary may give information that would normally be kept from the public under the Freedom of Information Act to a non‑government person if that person needs it to do work under contract for the Secretary and the Secretary is allowed to use the information. The Secretary must make the receiver follow security rules set by the Secretary. If a foreign government voluntarily gives drug information to the United States and asks that it not be made public, and there is a written agreement, the Secretary does not have to release that information under FOIA or other laws when the information is about inspections, investigations, alerts, or a drug that is likely to cause serious harm or death. The written agreement must say how long this protection lasts; if no time is set, it lasts no more than 36 months. The rule does not let anyone hide information from Congress or from a U.S. court order. The Secretary can make deals to share certain drug information (including information named in section 331(j)) with foreign governments that the Secretary, through the Commissioner of Food and Drugs, has certified can protect trade secrets. Those deals must promise the foreign government will not disclose the information unless the drug sponsor agrees in writing or the Secretary declares a public health emergency under section 247d of title 42. Inspection reports may be shared only if the foreign government has legal access to them and will use them for civil regulatory purposes. Other safety information may be shared if the Secretary has reason to believe the drug could cause serious harm or death. Sharing under other laws is still allowed.
Full Legal Text
Food and Drugs — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
21 U.S.C. § 379
Title 21 — Food and Drugs
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60