What Does a "Terminated" FDA Recall Status Mean?
When a recall record shows a status of "Terminated", it marks a regulatory milestone in the record's history. This guide explains what that means administratively and how to interpret a concluded recall without reading clinical meaning into it.
What a "Terminated" recall status means
A recall status of "Terminated" means the FDA has recorded the recall action as concluded. In its recall lifecycle, a terminated recall is one the agency considers completed and closed in its enforcement record. Like every status, it is an administrative field describing the record rather than a clinical conclusion.
Termination is a regulatory milestone in the record's history. It does not, by itself, describe the condition of any specific unit or what any individual should do. The dependable interpretation of a terminated record is found by reading the source fields and confirming them at the linked official FDA source.
What an "Ongoing" recall status means
Each recall enforcement report carries a status that indicates where the action sits in its lifecycle. A status of "Ongoing" means the recall action was still in progress at the time reflected in the source record. It is an administrative state describing the record, not a statement about risk to any individual.
Status values can change over time as the agency updates its records. Because this site reflects what was published at the time of ingestion, an "Ongoing" status here should be confirmed against the live official source before being relied upon, especially for any time-sensitive use.
What FDA enforcement reports are
The FDA publishes enforcement reports that document recall actions. These reports are the administrative record of a recall: they capture the recalling firm, a product description, the recall classification and status, identifiers such as a recall number, and relevant dates. The openFDA Drug Enforcement API exposes these reports in machine-readable form, which is what this site indexes.
An enforcement report is a record of a regulatory action, not a clinical document. It describes what action was taken and how the agency categorised it. Reading the report tells you the administrative facts of the recall; it does not tell you what any individual should do, which is why every record here links back to the official source for verification.
How to read an FDA recall record
A recall record on this site reproduces the structured fields from the FDA enforcement report: the recall number and event identifier, the classification and status, a product description, the recalling firm, the distribution pattern, location fields, and relevant dates. The recalling firm's stated reason is reproduced verbatim as a regulatory data field, for identification and verification only.
Reading the record means reading these administrative fields and understanding that each is a data point, not advice. The classification and status describe the agency's categorisation and the lifecycle stage; the identifiers let you locate the original report. Every record links to a verifiable openFDA query so the source can be confirmed.
What this does not mean
This guide and the underlying recall data are regulatory information only. They do not constitute medical advice and do not tell you whether to start, stop, switch, or avoid any product. They do not provide diagnosis, treatment, or dosage guidance, and they do not assess safety for any individual.
A regulatory record is an administrative fact about an action or a status. It is not a judgement about a company or a product, and it is not a personalised risk statement. For any health decision, consult a qualified healthcare professional, and treat the official FDA source as the authoritative record.
How to verify the official FDA source
Every record on this site links back to the verifiable openFDA query linked on each recall record. To verify any detail discussed here, open a relevant record, follow its source link, and confirm the fields — identifiers, status, classification, dates — directly against the agency's published data.
Because public data can lag or omit details held only in primary documents, verification at the official source is always the dependable final step. If a value here differs from the live FDA record, the FDA record governs.
Using this information responsibly
Public FDA regulatory data is most useful when it is treated as a finding aid and an administrative reference. The dependable workflow is to locate the relevant record, read the structured fields as data points rather than instructions, and then confirm the details against the official FDA source before relying on them. This keeps interpretation anchored to what the agency has actually published.
It is equally important to respect the boundaries of the data. A recall or shortage record describes a regulatory action or a supply status; it does not describe the clinical role of any product, does not assess risk for any individual, and is not a judgement about any company. For questions that touch health decisions, a qualified healthcare professional is the right source, and for the authoritative regulatory record, the FDA itself remains the system of record.
Related FDA records
The explanations in this guide describe fields and statuses you can see on real records. Use the links below to open the relevant hubs and example records on this site, then follow each record's source link to confirm the details at the official FDA source.
Frequently asked questions
- What does "Terminated" mean?
- It means the FDA has recorded the recall action as concluded and closed in its enforcement record. It is an administrative field.
- Does termination describe a specific unit?
- No. It describes the recall record's lifecycle, not the condition of any specific unit, and is not medical advice.
- How do I confirm a terminated record?
- Read the source fields and confirm them at the linked official FDA source.
Official FDA sources
Regulatory information only — not medical advice. This guide explains public FDA regulatory data and processes. It does not provide diagnosis, treatment, or dosage guidance, does not assess the safety of any product for any individual, and does not recommend starting, stopping, or switching any product. For health decisions, consult a qualified healthcare professional; for the authoritative record, consult the FDA directly.