The Food and Drug Administration said Tuesday that it had discovered the toxic chemical melamine in infant formula made by an American manufacturer, raising the possibility that the problem was more extensive in the United States than previously thought.
While few details were available late Tuesday, agency officials said they had discovered melamine at trace levels in a single sample of infant formula. It was also discovered in several samples of dietary supplements that are made by some of the same manufacturers who make formula.
F.D.A. officials insisted that the levels of melamine were so low that they did not pose a health threat.
“There’s no cause for concern or no risk from these levels,” said Judy Leon, an agency spokeswoman. Ms. Leon said the contamination was most likely the result of food contact with something like a can liner, or from some other manufacturing problems, but not from deliberate adulteration.
She declined to name the company that made the tainted infant formula.
Source: The New York Times
Latest from Quality Assurance & Food Safety
- Chef Robotics Introduces Pat-Down Capability for Meal Presentation and Sealing
- USDA Launches Regenerative Pilot Program
- Indoor Ag-Con Adds Food Safety Track to Conference Lineup
- IDFA Recognizes Federal Officials for Support of U.S. Dairy Industry
- Tetra Pak Acquires Bioreactors.net
- Fresh Del Monte Receives Rabobank Leadership Award
- São Paulo Earns Guinness World Record for Largest Municipal Food Security Program
- KPM Analytics Releases Ready-to-Use NIR Calibration Packages