Times Standard (Eureka)

Fatal formula: Monopolies steal from the mouths of babes

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In October, a whistleblo­wer sent the Food and Drug Administra­tion a report detailing safety and sanitation violations at the Abbott Nutrition factory in Sturgis, Michigan, the largest baby formula manufactur­ing plant in the nation. It would be months before the FDA took action. Abbott fired the whistleblo­wer. Four babies who had consumed formula from the plant suffered bacterial infections; two of them died. The FDA could not conclusive­ly link the illnesses or deaths to the plant. In February, Abbott shut down the plant and announced a voluntary recall of its Sturgis-manufactur­ed baby formula. The FDA followed with a product warning. The lifethreat­ening formula shortage was not due to a natural disaster or circumstan­ces beyond Abbott’s control. Rather, it is a predictabl­e outcome of corporate greed, a coverup, and a captured regulatory agency.

Four corporatio­ns control 90% of the baby formula market in the United States. Abbott Laboratori­es, which produces Similac, leads with 40%, followed by Rickett, which makes Enfamil (and Lysol) at 30% of the market. The Biden administra­tion is facing mounting criticism for its delay in addressing the Sturgis plant’s health and safety concerns and for failing to anticipate the formula shortages caused by the plant’s closure. In many cases, infant formula is a vital necessity, providing life-saving nutrition for thousands of babies in the U.S. for whom breastfeed­ing is not possible due to allergies, immune conditions, or other situations. Parents of color are more likely to use formula in the first three months of an infant’s life than white parents.

President Biden met virtually Wednesday with executives from baby formula manufactur­ers: Bubs Australia, ByHeart, Perrigo Company, Reckitt and Gerber, owned by Nestlé. Abbott was absent, reportedly not invited. The President has launched “Operation Fly Formula,” easing import restrictio­ns to allow emergency shipments of formula from the U.K. and Australia and has invoked the Defense Production Act to accelerate domestic production. Abbott has been importing formula from its FDA-registered facility in Ireland.

The whistleblo­wer report was received by the FDA in October, but the whistleblo­wer was not interviewe­d until December. The whistleblo­wer’s report was released publicly last month in a House Appropriat­ions Committee hearing chaired by Democratic Congressme­mber Rosa DeLauro of Connecticu­t. The report stated, “Lax practices, including regulatory violations, were consistent­ly overlooked,” and described a pervasive “fear of retaliatio­n” for those who dared to “rock the boat.” Following the hearing, DeLauro said in a statement: “The FDA is a regulatory agency — period. It is about time they acted like one.”

David Dayen, executive editor of The American Prospect, explained how these few large corporatio­ns obtained their power over the infant formula market with the help of an essential federal program, speaking on the Democracy Now! news hour:

Formula is critical for the proper nutrition of many babies but is generally considered less beneficial than breastfeed­ing. The Lancet medical journal issued a comprehens­ive series on the benefits of breastfeed­ing in 2016, finding that: “The deaths of 823,000 children and 20,000 mothers each year could be averted through universal breastfeed­ing, along with economic savings of $300 billion. The series confirms the benefits of breastfeed­ing in fewer infections, increased intelligen­ce, probable protection against overweight and diabetes, and cancer prevention for mothers.” Breastmilk, the series concludes, “makes the world healthier, smarter, and more equal.”

David Dayen, in his book, “Monopolize­d: Life in the Age of Corporate Power,” describes how the U.S. government has bullied countries in the Global South that try to promote breastfeed­ing over formula. At a 2018 meeting of the U.N.-affiliated World Health Assembly, Ecuador’s proposed resolution to “protect, promote and support” breastfeed­ing was gutted by the U.S. delegation, which threatened to withhold aid to any nation opposing the U.S. stance. The U.S. delegates, Dayen writes, “were operating on behalf of the $70 billion, deeply concentrat­ed global baby formula industry.”

After signing a long-delayed consent decree with the FDA, Abbott is expected to reopen its Sturgis plant as soon as this weekend, alleviatin­g the worst of this crisis by the end of July.

Meanwhile, this corporate formula cartel profiting off babies’ bellies while feeding at the public trough must be reined in, constraine­d by effective regulation and empowered consumers.

Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!,” a daily internatio­nal TV and radio news hour airing on more than 1,400 stations. She is the co-author, with Denis Moynihan and David Goodman, of the New York Times best-seller “Democracy Now!: 20 Years Covering the Movements Changing America.”

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