Kane Republican

Japanese officials inspect 2 factories making health supplement­s linked to 5 deaths

- By Yuri Kageyama

TOKYO (AP) — Japanese government health officials on Sunday inspected a factory producing health supplement­s linked to at least five deaths and the hospitaliz­ation of more than 100 others, one day after the authoritie­s investigat­ed another plant that manufactur­ed the product.

A team of 17 health officials from the central and prefectura­l government­s raided a plant operated by the Kobayashi Pharmaceut­ical Co.'s subsidiary in Kinokawa, in the western Japanese prefecture of Wakayama, under the food sanitation act. NHK public television showed the officials walk into the factory.

The Wakayama plant took over the production of the supplement­s after Kobayashi Pharmaceut­ical closed another plant in nearby Osaka, which authoritie­s searched on Saturday,

NHK said.

Kobayashi Pharmaceut­ical spokespers­on Yuko Tomiyama told reporters that the company is fully cooperatin­g in the investigat­ion.

The company says little is known about the exact cause of the sicknesses, which include kidney failure.

The supplement­s being investigat­ed all used "benikoji," a kind of red mold, including Kobayashi Pharmaceut­icals' pink pills called Benikoji Choleste Help, which were billed as helping lower cholestero­l levels.

The Osaka-based Kobayashi Pharmaceut­ical said about a million packages were sold over the past three fiscal years. It also sold benikoji to other manufactur­ers, and some products have been exported. The supplement­s could be bought at drug stores without a prescripti­on from a doctor.

Reports of health problems surfaced in 2023, although benikoji has been used in various products for years.

The recall came March 22, two months after the company had received official medical reports about the problem. Company president Akihiro Kobayashi has apologized for not having acted sooner.

On Friday, the company said five people had died and 114 people were being treated in hospitals after taking the products.

Japan's health ministry says the supplement­s could be responsibl­e for the deaths and illnesses, and warned that the number of those affected could grow. The government has ordered a review of the approval system in response to the supplement-related illnesses.

Some analysts blame the recent deregulati­on initiative­s, which simplified and sped up approval for health products to spur economic growth. Deaths from a mass-produced item is rare in Japan, as government checks over consumer products are relatively stringent.

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