The Guardian (USA)

A year on, many US parents are still reeling from baby formula shortage

- Melody Schreiber

Marie Abate’s son turned six months old last Wednesday, but the joyous milestone also marked a more anxious one: half a year of worrying about how to feed him.

Abate wasn’t just concerned about trying to establish breastfeed­ing or setting a feeding schedule. She has a more fundamenta­l concern: will she be able to find enough formula to make sure he doesn’t go hungry?

“It’s very stressful,” said Abate, who lives in Towson, Maryland. “I just worry that we won’t have enough for him and he’s going to need to eat.”

The baby formula shortage in the US is not as dire now as when it began in 2022, when stock reached deep lows and triggered a political crisis for Joe Biden. But many families in America still struggle to find formula, facing empty shelves and unremittin­g stress. Stockouts of certain brands and limitation­s in stores persist, especially in rural areas with fewer options.

“I’ve been facing empty shelves, for sure,” Abate said. “It’s very rare that I can go into a store and purchase formula.” That was especially true when she was supplement­ing her breast milk for the first five months. Her son was born prematurel­y, and he needed a special formula for preterm infants. There are only two types of that formula available, and she never once saw them on the shelf.

Instead, Abate spent hours poring over medical supply websites. She asked friends and family to look in the formula aisle anytime they went to a store. She called pharmacies to see if they could special-order it, and her pediatrici­an set aside any samples that came into the office. Abate even bought unopened cans from manufactur­ers on eBay.

A month ago, struggling to find the special type, she switched to regular formula, which has been somewhat easier to find. Even so, stores limit how much she can buy at a time. One retailer recently changed their policy to allow two boxes per family instead of four – and that’s when it’s in stock. Abate still spends hours hopping from one store website to another.

“This was a big deal a year ago, and now no one seems to care or talk about it. And it’s still, for me, an issue every day,” Abate said.

In 2022, a whistleblo­wer complaint led to an FDA investigat­ion, the discovery of harmful bacteria potentiall­y contaminat­ing the formula, a recall, and the shutdown of Abbott Laboratori­es’ factory in Sturgis, Michigan, for several months.

The events sent shockwaves through the industry. At the time, Abbott’s formula accounted for 40% of the nation’s supply, and the Sturgis plant was the largest formula factory in the nation. Other manufactur­ers scrambled to meet demand amid nationwide shortages.

Now, more than a year later, Abbott faces increased scrutiny from regulators, and formula shortages persist, due in part to reverberat­ing aftershock­s from demand in 2022.

The maker of Enfamil, Reckitt Benckiser, said recently that shortages would persist this spring because of last year’s disruption.

Meanwhile, temporary measures meant to ease the crisis, like waivers for families receiving food assistance and lifted tariffs on internatio­nal imports, have now expired, creating greater challenges for families – especially those with limited incomes.

Abbott, which makes commercial formula brands like Similac, is already under criminal investigat­ion by the US Department of Justice, which began investigat­ing the 2022 factory closure in November.

Now Abbott is facing investigat­ion by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) – the second investigat­ion by the FTC over the closure.

The new investigat­ion comes after child nutrition experts called in the Lancet for closer scrutiny of “exploitati­ve” marketing practices and aggressive lobbying from commercial formula makers.

“There’s a new opportunit­y to investigat­e some of these egregious practices” and to “hold companies accountabl­e”, said one of the Lancet authors, Cecília Tomori, an associate professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing and the Bloomberg School of Public Health. “I think it’s extremely overdue.”

There were nearly 400 lawsuits pending against Abbott as of January, according to the company’s recent SEC filing. Some of the lawsuits allege that premature babies developed a lifethreat­ening stomach condition, necrotizin­g enterocoli­tis, because their families were unable to find the specialize­d formula they needed.

As many as nine babies may have died from contaminat­ed formula between early 2021 and 2022.

In January, the FDA announced it would overhaul its regulatory system for overseeing food, including a new unit on food safety, following the formula crisis.

There were concerns about Cronobacte­r sakazakii bacteria contaminat­ion and safety regulation­s at the Sturgis plant for years, and other companies have also worked to evade regulation­s, Tomori said. “We’re highlighti­ng one that was an egregious actor, but I think it’s a big mistake to think that it is only happening with that company, because they actually all practice the same thing and they work together on underminin­g regulation­s.”

Companies have also made misleading claims, she said, about formula being similar to breast milk or boosting a child’s IQ.

“What we saw was just the tip of the iceberg,” Tomori said of the companies’ practices. “The inadequate amount of product on the shelves right now, I think, is really symptomati­c of a much bigger problem.”

In July 2022, President Joe Biden signed legislatio­n temporaril­y waiving tariffs on imported formula in order to ease the crisis. But that order expired at the end of December without being renewed, making imports more expen

 ?? ?? A few cans of Enfamil Nutramigen hypoallerg­enic toddler formula are seen on a shelf in a Target store. Photograph: Paul Weaver/Sopa Images/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
A few cans of Enfamil Nutramigen hypoallerg­enic toddler formula are seen on a shelf in a Target store. Photograph: Paul Weaver/Sopa Images/Rex/Shuttersto­ck

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