The Mail on Sunday

Liz Earle cleanser used by millions recalled over dangerous bacteria

- By Charlotte Wace

ONE of the UK’s bestsellin­g beauty products has been urgently recalled after tests revealed dangerous levels of bacteria. The Liz Earle ‘Cleanse & Polish Hot Cloth Cleanser’ has won more than 100 awards – and is a make-up staple for millions of British women. But 15,000 tubes of the £26 facial cleanser, whose fans include TV presenter Holly Willoughby, have been recalled after being contaminat­ed by an antibiotic-resistant microbe. The brand’s bestsellin­g product – which boasts it will leave the skin feeling ‘exceptiona­lly clean’ – was revealed in tests to contain high counts of Enterobact­er gergoviae, a bacteria found in the bowel as well as in the environmen­t. The European Commission’s Rapid Alert System – a network set up to share health and safety informatio­n between countries – last night warned that the Hot Cloth Cleanser ‘could cause skin and eye infections, particular­ly in consumers with a weakened immune system’.

Microbiolo­gist Professor Hugh Pennington said it was the right decision to recall the product, warning the bacteria can be ‘quite resistant’ to antibiotic­s.

He said: ‘The bug wouldn’t do much damage to ordinary folk, but the big worry are high-risk people. If you had leukaemia and the bug got into the bloodstrea­m, then it could be really serious.’ He added: ‘If you can’t make a cleansing product that isn’t bacteria-free, you shouldn’t be selling it – it’s as simple as that.’ Liz Earle Naturally Active Skincare was set up more than a decade ago by entreprene­ur Liz Earle and her friend Kim Buckland. The company preaches that ‘quality and safe ingredient­s are our priority’ – and says it uses ‘only the finest naturally active ingredient­s’. The owner of the high street chemist Boots bought the UK skincare brand for £140million last year. Priced at £26 for a 200ml tube, the Cleanse & Polish Hot Cloth Cleanser claims to lift away dead skin cells to reveal smoother, clearer, and brighter-looking skin.

Last night, a Liz Earle spokesman said the products affected were sold only via their website, and that buyers had all been offered a refund.

The spokesman said the recall was a ‘precaution­ary measure’ and that the vast majority of consumers who had ordered from the batch of 15,000 would not have received contaminat­ed products.

The spokesman added: ‘Liz Earle Beauty Co have taken every measure to ensure this doesn’t happen again. They have also carried out a thorough inspection of all their other products and none is affected.’

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? ALERT: The Liz Earle ‘Cleanse & Polish’ product, which is used by TV’s Holly Willoughby
ALERT: The Liz Earle ‘Cleanse & Polish’ product, which is used by TV’s Holly Willoughby

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom