British authorities investigating baby formula contamination said on Thursday there had been 36 likely cases of children developing symptoms consistent with poisoning from affected batches in the country.
Nestle recalled some batches of its key infant nutrition products, including SMA, BEBA and NAN infant and follow-on formulas, across Europe on January 6 due to potential contamination with a toxin that could cause nausea and vomiting.
Two weeks later, Danone recalled one batch of its Aptamil infant formula. Worries over the presence of the cereulide toxin have triggered recalls in dozens of countries and raised concerns among parents.
The UK Health Security Agency said that given the widespread availability of the affected products prior to their recall some cases were expected after it alerted hospitals to look out for symptoms consistent with the poisoning.
“Current surveillance indicators do not show unusual increases in reports of vomiting in children under the age of one for this time of year, but UKHSA are monitoring these outputs,” the statement on Thursday said.
(Reporting by Sarah Young, editing by Catarina Demony)
Related:
- EU Body’s Advice on Toxin Limit in Baby Formula Prompts More Recalls
- Europe to Decide How Much Toxin in Baby Formula Is Too Much
- Danone Recalls Specific Baby Formula Batches Made in Ireland as Toxin Scare Widens
- France Reports Second Baby Death Amid Tainted Formula Crisis
- Dairy Giants Rush to Recall Infant Formula After Expanding Contamination Scare
- China Urges Nestlé to Work Quickly on Baby Formula Recall
- Nestle Infant Formula Recall Widens to Africa, the Americas and Asia
- Nestle Recalls Infant Formula Batches in 25 Countries Over Toxin Risk
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