South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Abbott restarts formula plant closed due to contaminat­ion

- By Matthew Perrone Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Abbott Nutrition has restarted production at the Michigan baby formula factory that has been closed for months due to contaminat­ion, the company said Saturday, taking a step toward easing a nationwide supply shortage expected to persist into the summer.

The February shutdown of the largest formula factory in the country led to the supply problems that have forced some parents to seek formula from food banks, friends and doctors’ offices.

Abbott said it initially will prioritize production of its EleCare specialty formulas for infants with severe food allergies and digestive problems who have few other options for nutrition. The company said it will take approximat­ely three weeks before new formula from the plant begins getting to consumers.

“We will ramp production as quickly as we can while meeting all requiremen­ts,” Abbott said in a statement.

The plant’s reopening is one of several federal actions expected to improve supplies in the weeks ahead. President Joe Biden’s administra­tion has eased import rules for foreign manufactur­ers, airlifted formula from Europe and invoked federal emergency rules to prioritize U.S. production.

Abbott closed the Sturgis, Michigan, factory in February after the Food and Drug Administra­tion began investigat­ing four bacterial infections among infants who consumed powdered formula from the plant. Two of the babies died. The company continues to state that its products have not been directly linked to the infections, which involved different bacterial strains.

FDA inspectors eventually uncovered violations at the plant, including bacterial contaminat­ion, a leaky roof and lax safety protocols. The FDA has faced intense scrutiny for taking months to close the plant and then negotiate its reopening. Agency leaders recently told Congress they had to enter a legally binding agreement with Abbott to assure all the problems were fixed.

Abbott’s February recall of several leading brands, including Similac, squeezed supplies that had already been strained by supply chain disruption­s and stockpilin­g during COVID19 shutdowns.

The shortage has been most dire for children with allergies, digestive problems and metabolic disorders who rely on specialty formulas. The Abbott factory is the only source of many of those products, providing nutrition to about 5,000 U.S. babies, according to federal officials.

Abbott is one of four companies that produce about 90% of U.S. formula.

FDA Commission­er Robert Califf recently told lawmakers it could be about two months before formula supplies return to normal levels. The agency has waived many of its regulatory requiremen­ts to accept more formula from the United Kingdom, Australia and other nations.

U.S. manufactur­ers, including Reckitt and Gerber, have also stepped up production, running plants 24/7 and sourcing more formula from alternate facilities.

 ?? MICHAEL CONROY/AP ?? Pallets of baby formula from Germany seen May 22 in Indiana. The Michigan plant at the center of the formula shortage felt nationwide has restarted production.
MICHAEL CONROY/AP Pallets of baby formula from Germany seen May 22 in Indiana. The Michigan plant at the center of the formula shortage felt nationwide has restarted production.

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