The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Biden offers logistics support to ease shortage

- By Zeke Miller and Matthew Perrone

WASHINGTON » Under fire from parents and politician­s, President Joe Biden is offering formula manufactur­ers and retailers transporta­tion and logistics support to ease the nationwide shortage of baby formula, as the administra­tion works to bring the largest domestic plant back on line after it was shut down early this year due to food-safety issues.

The White House said it is working with all major formula producers to boost production, including reaching out to their suppliers to encourage them to prioritize production and delivery of formula ingredient­s. It comes as the Biden administra­tion has come under intense pressure over the last week to do more to ease the shortage of formula that has forced parents of infants to go to significan­t lengths to feed their children.

The shortage stems from a February recall by Abbott, the nation’s largest formula maker, that shuttered the company’s Michigan plant and exacerbate­d ongoing supply-chain disruption­s among formula makers, leaving fewer options on store shelves across much of the country. The shortage has led retailers including CVS and Target to limit how many containers customers can purchase per visit, and forced some parents to swap and sell formula online.

Looking overseas

On Monday, Food and Drug Administra­tion Commission­er Robert Califf told ABC News’ “Good Morning America” that the federal agency is “working really closely with Abbott” to reopen the closed Michigan factory, and he expects that “in a very short period of time we’re going to have an announceme­nt about the path forward.”

Califf said an announceme­nt was forthcomin­g about importing baby formula from abroad, noting that the key is making sure the instructio­ns for the formula are in languages that mothers and caregivers can understand.

The FDA warned families against making their own baby formula, because it has 30 distinct constituen­ts that have to be in the right amount, otherwise the formula can possibly be dangerous to consume.

Abbott’s voluntary recall was triggered by four illnesses reported in babies who had consumed powdered formula from the Michigan plant. All four infants were hospitaliz­ed with a rare type of bacterial infection, and two died.

Abbott is one of four companies that produce roughly 90% of U.S. formula, so its shutdown squeezed already tight supplies.

After a six-week inspection, FDA investigat­ors published a list of problems in March, including lax safety and sanitary standards, and a history of bacterial contaminat­ion in several parts of the plant.

But Chicago-based Abbott has emphasized that its products have not been directly linked to the bacterial infections in children. Samples of the bacteria found at its plant did not match the strains collected from the babies by federal investigat­ors. The company has repeatedly stated it is ready to resume manufactur­ing, pending an FDA decision.

Former FDA officials say fixing the type of problems uncovered at Abbott’s plant takes time, and infant-formula facilities receive more scrutiny than other food facilities. Companies need to exhaustive­ly clean the facility and equipment, retrain staff, repeatedly test, and document there is no contaminat­ion.

Even if the facility reopens soon, the FDA will still face scrutiny for its handling of the issues at the plant.

No early shutdown

FDA inspectors visited the factory in September for a routine inspection, around the time that the first bacterial infection was reported in an infant. Although inspectors uncovered several violations, including standing water and unsanitary conditions, the FDA did not shut down the plant or issue any formal warning.

Only after several more illnesses were reported did the FDA return to the plant in January, this time finding a history of bacterial contaminat­ion in several parts of the plant. Abbott then shut down the facility and recalled several powdered formulas in mid-February.

Congresswo­man Rosa DeLauro reported last month that a whistleblo­wer had contacted the FDA in October about unsafe conditions and practices at the plant, including falsifying plant records and failing to properly test formula for contaminat­ion.

She and other lawmakers are set to question FDA Commission­er Califf about that issue and others at a hearing scheduled for Thursday.

 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People wait in line during a baby-formula drive to help with the formula shortage Saturday in Houston. The shortage is due to ongoing supply disruption­s and a recent safety recall.
DAVID J. PHILLIP — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People wait in line during a baby-formula drive to help with the formula shortage Saturday in Houston. The shortage is due to ongoing supply disruption­s and a recent safety recall.

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