The US Food and Drug Administration warned people on
Thursday about the possibility to find tainted infant formula from China on sale
at ethnic groceries nationwide and urged them to avoid buying it.
The warning comes after 59 infants in China from a rural area of northwest Gansu province have been
diagnosed with kidney stones this year after being fed with low-price powdered
milk. One of the infants died. Similar cases also occurred in Jiangsu,
Ningxia, Gansu,
Shandong, Anhui
and Hunan.
There were no cases of kidney stones in 2006 and 2007.
On a thorough analysis, the formula sold in China was found
to be contaminated with melamine, a chemical used in making plastics. The same
substance was found in pet food ingredients from China and linked to the deaths and
illnesses of hundreds of cats and dogs in 2007. Melamine can make food appear
to have higher levels of protein in testing but can also cause kidney failure.
All
the babies had all been fed the same brand of low-price powder milk sold under
the “Sanlu” brand, manufactured by a leading Chinese dairy products company,
the report revealed.
However,
the Sanlu Group has stated that the powder milk involved in the scandal was
counterfeit. In addition, it has dispatched teams to independently investigate
the Gansu
incident.
It
is not the first time China
confronts with a milk-related problem. Four years ago, 13 infants died of
nutritional deficiencies after being fed substandard milk powder. About 170 other
babies suffered from malnutrition and other symptoms including swollen heads
and an inability to grow after being fed deficient milk powders. The case
triggered widespread investigations into food and health safety at the time.
Lab analysis revealed that the formula involved in the scandal was made of
starch, flour and sugar.
Although no Chinese brands of powdered milk are approved for
export to the United States,
the US regulators are
concerned that some Chinese formula may be on sale at ethnic groceries particularly
in places like New York and San Francisco that have large populations of
Chinese immigrants.
“We have some concerns that there may be some supplies of
infant formula that may have gotten into the country illegally and may be in
specialty markets that serve the Chinese community,” Janice Oliver, deputy
director of the FDA’s Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, said in an
interview.
At the same time, she wanted to assure people that “there is
no threat of contamination in the domestic supply of infant formula.” Also,
none of the manufacturers of baby formula in the United
States receive ingredients from China.
The US
makers of milk-based baby formula currently approved by the Food and Drug
Administration are Abbott Nutrition, Bristol-Myers Squibb unit Mead Johnson
Nutritionals, Nestle USA,
PBM Nutritionals and Solus Products.