Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

China: Melamine tainted milk, current situation

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #46
    Re: China: Melamine tainted milk, current situation

    http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/.../en/index.html

    Vigilance needed to ensure safe infant food

    WHO and FAO alert countries to possible spread of melamine-contaminated dairy products

    26 September 2008 | GENEVA/ROME

    WHO and the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) are urging affected countries to ensure safe feeding of millions of infants following the ongoing melamine-contaminated milk crisis in China. The two agencies also call on countries to be alert to the possible spread of melamine-contaminated dairy products.

    "While breastfeeding is the ideal way of providing infants with the nutrients they need for healthy growth and development, it is also critical to ensure that there is an adequate supply of safe powdered infant formula to meet the needs of infants who are not breastfed," said Dr J?rgen Schlundt, Director of the WHO Food Safety Department.

    Replacing powdered infant formula with other products such as condensed milk, honey mixed with milk, or fresh milk is inappropriate as such products would put at risk the safety and nutritional status of this vulnerable population group, the two agencies advised.

    "Restoring consumer confidence is critical. Melamine-contaminated products should be removed from the food chain in order to prevent further exposure. The safe supply of dairy products needs to be restored immediately,? said Dr Ezzeddine Boutrif, Director of the FAO Nutrition and Consumer Protection Division.

    Safe feeding for infants

    WHO recommends that all infants should be fed exclusively with breast milk for the first six months of life. No other liquid or food, not even water, is needed during this period. Thereafter, infants should receive adequate and safe complementary foods while breastfeeding continues up to two years of age and beyond.

    Following reports of findings of imported melamine-contaminated products in several countries over the last two weeks, countries should closely monitor their markets. The two agencies highlighted that melamine-contaminated products could reach markets in other countries through both formal and informal trade. Getting information about the origin of the product, up-to-date recall information or in some cases testing for melamine contamination might be considered. If found contaminated, appropriate actions such as product recall and safe disposal should be taken, based on an assessment of the risk to human health.

    Safe supply of food critical

    Food safety is not the sole responsibility of public authorities. The food industry is also responsible for ensuring a safe supply of food to the consumer. ?It is critical that the industry strongly invests in food safety and adopts a food safety culture covering the food chain from raw materials through to the final product,? said Dr Boutrif.

    Incidents such as melamine contamination in China not only impact food safety and human health but also put the livelihoods of hundreds of millions of dairy farmers at risk. "There is a need for countries to do major investment in strengthening their food control and food-borne disease surveillance systems as it could minimize the potential occurrence of food safety incidents like this one," said Dr Schlundt.

    The melamine-contaminated dairy products event first came to the attention of the international organizations on 11 September. Both WHO and FAO have used the International Food Safety Authorities Network (INFOSAN) to inform and update national food safety authorities on this crisis, one of the largest in recent years.

    Over 54 000 children have sought medical treatment in China after drinking melamine-contaminated infant formula. Almost 12 900 are currently hospitalized.

    Melamine is commonly used in food contact materials (e.g. containers, labels, etc.) and can also be used in agriculture production such as fertilizer. Whether this has a potential for carry-over into food at low concentrations (usually in the range of microgram per kilogram) and further impact on human health may need further evaluation.

    Melamine on its own is of low toxicity. But animal studies have suggested that kidney problems occur when melamine is present in combination with cyanuric acid, a potential impurity of melamine. The level of melamine found in the contaminated infant formula has been as high as 2,560 miligram per kilogram of food, while the level of cyanuric acid is unknown.

    Comment


    • #47
      Re: China: Melamine tainted milk, current situation

      The above WHO press release is also available in:

      - Chinese: http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/.../zh/index.html
      - Arabic: http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/.../ar/index.html

      Russian, French and Spanish have not yet been translated.

      Comment


      • #48
        Re: China: Melamine tainted milk, current situation

        More figures in this article http://udn.com/NEWS/MAINLAND/MAI2/4535444.shtml

        Spread "Guangdong is also condensed milk in sealed dart

        【聯合報╱大陸新聞中心/綜合報導】 【United Daily News ╱ mainland news / press release】 2008.09.27 03:18 am 2008.09.27 03:18 am

        三聚氰胺這把火,現在也波及大陸的煉乳。 Melamine this fire, now spread to the mainland of condensed milk. 廣州市黃埔區質監局近日檢查發現,轄區內有三批次煉奶中含三聚氰胺,目前已封存所有使用煉奶的產品一千一百 一十五公斤。

        Huangpu District of Guangzhou Quality Supervision Inspection Bureau recently found that the area in three batches of milk containing refining melamine, the archive has been refining the use of all the 1115 kilograms of milk products.

        在另外三家企業中,還封存涉嫌三聚氰胺問題原料七百六十五公斤,但媒體並未點出企業名稱。

        In the other three companies, also sealed the issue in connection Melamine 765 kg of raw materials, but the media did not point out the name of the enterprise.

        「羊城晚報」報導,毒奶粉事件發生後,黃埔區質監局組成三個檢查小組,本月十四日起,對轄區內進行地毯式檢 查,截至廿四日,該局已封存三家企業涉嫌三聚氰胺問題原料七百六十五公斤。

        "Yangcheng Evening News" reported that powdered milk poisoning incident, the Huangpu District Board composed of Quality Supervision Inspection of the three groups on the 14th of this month, to the area to carry out blanket inspections, as of 24, the council has sealed the three were suspected of melamine 765 kg of raw materials issues.

        對九家乳製品再加工生產企業的七十一批次原料和成品送檢,沒想到檢查報告一出來,其中三批次煉乳中含三聚氰 胺,該局立即派出執法組封存所有使用煉奶的產品一千五百一十五公斤。

        9 of the dairy processing enterprises in the production of 71 batches of raw materials and finished products will be inspected, did not expect an inspection report, which condensed milk in three batches with melamine, which immediately dispatched law enforcement group sealed all Lian milk products 1515 kg.

        目前黃埔質監單位已全力進行成品的溯源追查,對所有九月十四日前生產、使用過奶類原材料、在保存期限內的產 品,未出廠銷售的,應檢驗三聚氰胺項目合格後,才能出廠銷售;已經出廠的,應對每批次成品使用的奶類原材料 批次進行溯源登記。

        Currently Whampoa quality supervision units have been finished in full swing to trace the source of all the production on September 14, dairy raw materials used in the preservation period of the product, not the factory sales, melamine items after passing the test can be manufactured for sale ; The factory has to deal with each batch of finished batches of raw milk used to carry out the registration back.

        一旦發現該批次奶類原材料涉嫌三聚氰胺超標,廿四小時內立即召回成品。

        Once a batch of the raw milk suspected of melamine standard, 24-hour period immediately recall products.

        【2008/09/27 聯合報】 @ http://udn.com/ 2008/09/27】

        Comment


        • #49
          Re: China: Melamine tainted milk, current situation

          http://news.hexun.com/2008-09-27/109344050.html

          Beijing to add 176 cases of children with stones

          2008年09月27日02:51 来源: At 2:51 on Sept. 27, 2008 Source: 我有话说 I have to say 查看评论 ( 0 ) View comments (0) 好文我顶( 0 ) I have a good text-top (0) 本报讯(记者李秋萌)昨天,北京市卫生局新闻发言人邓小虹表示,昨日本市新增结石患儿176例,解放军总医 院、北京军区总医院、武警总医院等军队、武警设有儿科的医院已加入到了筛查、治疗?问题奶粉?结石婴幼儿医 院中。

          A (Reporter Li Meng) yesterday, the Beijing Municipal Health Bureau spokesman, said Deng Xiaohong, the city yesterday to add 176 cases of children with stones, the People's Liberation Army General Hospital, General Hospital of Beijing Military Region, the People's Armed Police General Hospital, and other armed forces, armed police with the pediatric Hospital has been added to the screening, treatment, "milk" stone infants and young children in the hospital.

          增加筛查救治的医院数量不仅方便了患儿就近就医,也分流了患儿,缓解了本市103家筛查诊疗医院的压力,同 时使北京儿童医院等原来就诊压力很大的医院,就诊患儿人数逐步减少,实现了婴幼儿当天就诊,当 日检查完毕。

          Increase the number of hospitals where screening is not only convenient for children to the nearest medical treatment, children with a diversion to ease the city had 103 hospitals, clinics screening pressure, so that the Beijing Children's Hospital at the same time, and so a lot of pressure on the treatment of the original hospital, patients suffering from To gradually reduce the number of children, infants and young children to achieve the same day visit, the day after inspection.

          据北京市公共卫生信息中心统计,9月25日12时至9月26日12时,全市二、三级医院接诊有问题奶粉喂养 史相关患病婴幼儿13482人次,接诊人数分布在104家医院。

          According to the Beijing Municipal Public Health Information Center, at 12 o'clock on September 25 to at 12 o'clock on Sept. 26, the city's secondary and tertiary hospital reception problems related to the history of powdered milk to feed 13,482 people sick infants and young children, the number of reception in 104 Hospitals. 新确诊泌尿系统结石婴幼儿176名,北京户籍94名,患儿分布在全市41家医院。

          The new confirmed urinary tract stones 176 infants and young children, 94 in Beijing household registration, children in 41 hospitals in the city.

          截至昨天12时,累计筛查103877人次,确诊患儿2377名,北京户籍1200名,其他省市共1177 名。

          As of 12 o'clock yesterday, screening a total of 103,877 person-times, children diagnosed 2377, 1200 domicile Beijing and other provinces and cities a total of 1177.

          Comment


          • #50
            Re: China: Melamine tainted milk, current situation

            http://www.dlwb.com.cn/dlwb/news/jsp/shownews.jsp

            As at 12 o'clock on the 25th city in a timely manner diagnosed 499 children

            [■通讯员金银栋]  2008-09-27 02:08 [■ correspondent gold and silver dong] 2008-09-27 02:08
            省政府综合督察组充分肯定我市应对处置?婴幼儿奶粉事件?工作,该事件发生后,截至25日12时我市及时确 诊患儿499名■通讯员金银栋

            Integrated Provincial Government Inspectorate fully affirmed the city to deal with the disposal "of infant milk powder incident", the incident occurred, as at 12 o'clock on the 25th city in time 499 children diagnosed with gold and silver correspondent

            ...snip


            截至24日17时,市工商系统共出动执法人员13268人次,清查经营主体50609户次,下架问题奶制品 25530公斤,为消费者退换奶制品7415公斤,全市城乡的问题奶制品已全部下架退市;截至25日12时 ,全市各级医疗机构共筛查婴幼儿41246名,确诊患儿499名,筛查阳性率1.2%,累计收治入院33名 ,已出院20名,现有13名在院治疗。

            As at 17 o'clock on on the 24th, the city industrial and commercial system, law enforcement officers deployed a total of 13,268 person-times, the main operating inventory 50,609 times, the next issue of aircraft 25,530 kg dairy products, dairy products for consumers returned 7415 kg, the issue of dairy products in urban and rural areas in the city have been under Planes from the stock market; ended at 12:00 on the 25th, the city's medical institutions at all levels screened a total of 41,246 infants and young children, 499 children diagnosed, the positive rate of 1.2 percent screening, the hospital treated a total of 33 have been discharged from hospital 20, 13 In the hospital for medical treatment.

            据医务人员介绍,我市所收治患儿病情均较平稳,至今未发现危重病例。 According to the medical staff, our city's children with the disease than those treated by a smooth, so far found no critical cases.

            ...snip

            Comment


            • #51
              Re: China: Melamine tainted milk, current situation

              There are many more reports coming in from cities regarding the number of children affected. I can't post them all. Hopefully the Central Government will provide cumulative total figures soon

              Comment


              • #52
                Re: China: Melamine tainted milk, current situation

                Post #41 contains detailed infos about brand names, packages, manufacturing lots and melamine concentrations.

                Comment


                • #53
                  Re: China: Melamine tainted milk, current situation

                  via google language tools:



                  中國翻譯在這裡


                  Shanghai (China), Sep 25 / EFE
                  The scandal of milk adulterated with melamine, which is already affecting more than 53,000 children, now extends to animals, after detecting crystals in the urine of an orangutan who drank milk powder in one of the most polluted, the newspaper reported today "Shanghai Daily".
                  The animal, fifteen months, took milk from the Sanlu mark, the first in which melamine was detected because their carers felt it was best for the absorption of calcium.
                  "These crystals are incipient signs of a stone," explained one of the veterinarians who attended the orangutan after detecting a weird yellow color in urine of the animal, which lives in a zoo in the Chinese city of Hangzhou, east of the country.
                  According to the caregivers, these animals they love so much milk and the orangutan as his sick brother, who also passed the revision of the veterinarian, used to make a "big bag" every week.
                  The zoo has already announced it will send to other animals that have taken Sanlu milk to the vet for a full review in the coming days.
                  The milk contaminated with melamine, a chemical that tricks the detectors and protein that produces kidney stones in children, has already caused the deaths of four babies in China.
                  Around 7000 tons of dairy products have been withdrawn from the shops across the Asian country, while the head of food safety in China, Li Changjiang, resigned last Monday by the scandal.


                  Shanghai (China), 25 sep/EFE
                  El esc?ndalo de la leche adulterada con melamina, que afecta ya a m?s de 53,000 ni?os, se extiende ahora a los animales, tras detectar cristales en la orina de un orangut?n que bebi? leche en polvo de una de las marcas contaminadas, inform? hoy el diario "Shanghai Daily".
                  El animal, de quince meses, tomaba leche de la marca Sanlu, la primera en la que se detect? melamina, porque sus cuidadores consideraban que era la mejor para la absorci?n del calcio.
                  "Estos cristales muestran signos incipientes de una piedra", explic? uno de los veterinarios que atendi? al orangut?n tras detectar un color amarillo extra?o en la orina del animal, que vive en el zoo de la ciudad china de Hangzhou, en el este del pa?s.
                  Seg?n los cuidadores, a estos animales les encanta la leche y tanto el orangut?n enfermo como su hermano, que tambi?n pas? la revisi?n del veterinario, sol?an tomar una "bolsa grande" todas las semanas.
                  El zoo ya ha anunciado que enviar? a otros animales que han tomado leche Sanlu al veterinario para un examen completo en los pr?ximos d?as.
                  La leche contaminada con melamina, un qu?mico que enga?a a los detectores de prote?nas y que produce c?lculos renales en los menores, ya ha provocado la muerte de cuatro beb?s en China.
                  Unas 7,000 toneladas de productos l?cteos han sido retiradas de las tiendas de todo el pa?s asi?tico, mientras que el m?ximo responsable de seguridad alimentaria de China, Li Changjiang, dimiti? el pasado lunes por el esc?ndalo.

                  Comment


                  • #54
                    Re: China: Melamine tainted milk, current situation


                    Lactoferrin is used to boost immune system and is on some prep lists.


                    NZ exported melamine contamination in dairy protein

                    Fri, 26 Sep 2008

                    One of New Zealand's most expensive dairy exports, lactoferrin, which sells for about $500,000 a tonne, has been contaminated with melamine.
                    But food safety officials say they don't know how the contamination occurred and are now looking at whether the melamine was in the raw milk.
                    The officials declined to say which manufacturer sent the contaminated lactoferrin to China, where the melamine was detected by in-market testing in the wake of the sale of poisoned milk as infant formula.
                    Only three New Zealand dairy companies produce lactoferrin - a milk protein used in sports drinks, infant formulas and capsules sold as dietary supplements to boost people's immune systems - and Fonterra and Westland have both told NZPA their products were not involved.
                    The remaining company, Tatua, based at Tatuanui near Morrinsville, is the world's biggest manufacturer of lactoferrin, and processes up to 14,000 tonnes of raw milk to extract just one tonne of the protein.
                    Tatua chairman Steve Allen referred media queries to the company's' chief executive, Paul McGilvary, but told NZPA he had been busy working with the New Zealand Food Safety Authority until tonight.
                    "This whole thing, internationally, is pretty major," said Mr Allen. Overseas perceptions of the New Zealand food industry were crucial and it was important to get all the facts right.
                    NZFSA director of compliance and investigation Geoff Allen told NZPA he believed the contaminated lactoferrin might have come from more than one company.
                    "We're still waiting for official results from all of the manufacturers of lactoferrin, so I can't say which one is in and which one is out."
                    Yesterday Mr Allen said the authority was considering any role which might have been played in the contamination by cyromazine, an insecticide which breaks down to melamine in mammals.
                    NZFSA has 24 livestock drenches and sprays containing cyromazine listed among registered agricultural compounds on its website.
                    "The possible contribution of breakdown products from cyromazine is being included in the investigations that are underway.'
                    Dr Allen had earlier confirmed that NZ lactoferrin sent to China had been contaminated with melamine. "Explanations for its presence in this case include leaching from plastic involved in processing or packaging, or other unintended outcome of the manufacturing process."
                    "We can't say definitively where it's come from," he said.
                    The authority was following a lot of leads, and had so far ruled out deliberate adulteration, and had "practically eliminated" contamination caused by the manufacturing process, which is common to all three exporters.
                    "We can see no mechanism where melamine can be introduced or produced during the process," he said.
                    "Now, we're looking back and saying `how can it come in or be introduced in the raw material'," he said.
                    Dr Allen said the contamination was at low levels which did not present any health risk for consumers.
                    He questioned whether the melamine would be detectable once it was diluted when used as an ingredient in a finished product.
                    In June, NZFSA published a list of contaminant levels it will allow in animal products, and specified a maximum permissible level of cyromazine and melamine as 0.3mg/kg in sheepmeats, and 0.15mg/kg in poultry and eggs.



                    One of New Zealand's most expensive dairy exports, lactoferrin, which sells for about $500,000 a tonne, has been contaminated with melamine. But...

                    Comment


                    • #55
                      Re: China: Melamine tainted milk, current situation

                      Hat-tip FrenchieGirl -



                      Rush to find extent of NZ melamine contamination

                      Thursday, 25 September 2008

                      Safety officials are scrambling to determine the extent to which New Zealand-made foods have been contaminated with the toxic chemical melamine which has poisoned thousands of Chinese babies.

                      At least one New Zealand manufacturer has admitted producing food products contaminated with melamine.

                      "A New Zealand company undertaking precautionary testing has. . . found a minute amount of melamine in one of its highly processed products," the New Zealand Food Safety Authority (NZFSA) said last night.

                      The authority is also pulling Chinese White Rabbit Creamy Candies off New Zealand shelves as they contain unacceptably high levels of melamine.

                      The lollies are apparently made with Chinese milk and tests have shown they contain 180 parts per million of melamine.

                      "This product contains sufficiently high levels of melamine which may, in some individuals, cause health problems such as kidney stones," the authority said.

                      "The levels we have found in these products are unacceptable."

                      People worried they may have eaten the sweets should seek medical advice, it added.

                      "This is a serious concern," NZFSA deputy chief executive Sandra Daly said in a "privileged statement" which protects the organisation from lawsuits.

                      "We cannot discount the likelihood of health risks resulting from the consumption of these sweets"

                      The sweets appeared to come from a number of manufacturers through a range of importers.

                      The tainted milk scandal in China came to light after milk powder sold by various companies including New Zealand dairy giant Fonterra's Chinese partner San Lu was found to be contaminated with melamine.

                      In New Zealand-made foods one potential contamination pathway the authority is expected to check is whether the melamine is a residue from pesticide sprays.

                      Chan King-ming, an associate professor of biochemistry at a Chinese university, told the New Scientist magazine yesterday that cyromazine, a derivative of melamine, has been widely used in China as a pesticide.

                      In New Zealand, cyromazine has been used in a pesticide called Veterzine, and in June, the NZFSA published a list of contaminant levels it will allow in animal products, and specified a maximum permissible level of cyromazine and melamine in 0.3mg/kg in sheepmeats, and 0.15mg/kg in poultry and eggs.

                      According to Prof Chan, cyromazine is absorbed into plants as melamine and has spread through the food chain in animal feeds.

                      "It is not just in milk products, but also in farm products and animal feed, fish diet," he said.

                      Associate professor in applied biology and chemical technology at Hong Kong Polytechnic University Peter Yu said that though it was known melamine caused kidney stones and problems in the kidney, there could also be other ill effects in the longterm.

                      "These are ingredients that shouldn't be in food," he said.

                      NZFSA said the un-named manufacturer who found melamine in the NZ-made product claimed that similar levels are being found in the same product produced in other countries. NZFSA did not specify the food, but downplayed the significance of the find for perceptions of NZ food safety.

                      It suggested that the low levels of melamine reported could be a "coincidental consequence" of the manufacturing process.

                      NZFSA has said its officials are waiting on a European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) scientific opinion on risks to human health associated with melamine in products that may have a low level of contamination.

                      There is a generally accepted "tolerable daily intake" of melamine in food in the EU (0.5mg for each kg of body weight daily) and in the US (0.63mg/kg of body weight/day).

                      But the NZFSA's principal adviser on toxicology, John Reeve, said that while the agency is aware of tolerable daily intake levels set by the EFSA and the US Food and Drug Agency (FDA) it had not acceptable daily intake for New Zealand.

                      - NZPA

                      --------------------------------------------

                      JAPAN

                      http://mdn.mainichi.jp/mdnnews/news/...na002000c.html

                      First incidence of melamine contamination reported in Japan

                      OSAKA -- Marudai Food Co. has announced the chemical melamine has been found in some of its Chinese-produced milk products, the first report of melamine-contaminated products being distributed in Japan.

                      Marudai, local and prefectural authorities announced that melamine was found in four products. The highest level of contamination found was 37 milligrams per kilogram, officials said.

                      Experts and the local government officials said the contamination poses no danger to health, and there have been no reports of illness.

                      The four products that were found to contain melamine were two varieties of "Cream Panda", "Matcha Azuki Milk Man" and "Gratin Crepe Corn," all produced in a factory in Shandong Province, China.

                      However, even if one were to eat 29 Cream Pandas every day, there be no health damage, said prefectural officials, based on a standard set by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. However, a researcher at the National Institute of Health Sciences did not rule out that it could adversely affect the children's health.

                      "If a child ate one or two pieces of these products, there will be no problem, considering the concentration that was detected in the test," he said. "However, if a child ate the products every day, or is suffering kidney disorder, we cannot rule out the possibility that the child may develop kidney stones or other disorders.

                      "If cyanuric acid is also present, it will have a stronger toxicity than melamine alone. It's necessary to analyze the products for cyanuric acid content," he said.

                      As of Friday noon, Marudai Food had retrieved 1,613 of 5,579 packages of its products in question, and the company has decided to cease production.

                      "Though (the content of melamine) was not the amount that would damage health, we are deeply sorry. We will continue to recall the products," said a representative of Marudai Food. The company is taking inquiries at: 0120-338845 (toll free, in Japanese).
                      Last edited by FrenchieGirl; September 27, 2008, 08:34 AM. Reason: Formatting

                      Comment


                      • #56
                        Re: China: Melamine tainted milk, current situation

                        Hong Kong: SFH on melamine incident [CHP]

                        Following is the transcript of remarks made by the Secretary for Food and Health, Dr York Chow, at a stand-up media session after attending a radio programme today (September 27):


                        Reporter:
                        Do you think the permissible level of melamine in food should be lower?

                        Secretary for Food and Health:
                        No. At the moment, because we take a lot of time analysing the international standards that are given by the European Union as well as by the United States, before we set this limit. In fact, there is no law anywhere in the world that actually set the limit for food, apart from Hong Kong. When we actually gazette the regulation, we set the limit which is more stringent than some of the permissible daily intake that is given by the United States. So, at the moment, we set the limit for milk and infant formulae and also any foods that are provided by children under 36 months at one milligram per kilogram of food. For other food, we set at 2.5 milligram per kilogram. You can see that from the last few days, there are a few other countries also set the standard. Most of them actually set higher than us. In Singapore, they set at 5.In New Zealand, they also set at 5 and Taiwan they set at 2.5. We feel that we are already adopting a much more stringent standard than many other countries. Of course, that would also mean some of the products we found that are above our legal limit might not be above the legal limit of other countries.

                        Reporter:
                        (inaudible)

                        Secretary for Food and Health:
                        We have analysed the possibility of suppliers as well as safety. The first consideration is safety. For infant, we have set it in a very stringent manner. I think that now our law can protect our children as well as all our citizens in both the infant formulae as well as other food. This is a very satisfactory law as far as we are concerned. Of course, we will be taking account of the scientific discovery in the coming months and years and see whether there is any need to adjust the level. But at the moment, we didn't need to do that.

                        (Please also refer to the Chinese session of the transcript)
                        --

                        View Original Article

                        Comment


                        • #57
                          Re: China: Melamine tainted milk, current situation

                          Hong Kong: No confirmed renal stone cases today [CHP]

                          The Centre for Health Protection (CHP) of the Department of Health today (September 27) did not receive new report from the Hospital Authority and private doctors of renal problems related to the consumption of melamine tainted milk products, a CHP spokesman said.


                          In the 24 hours up to 1pm today, the CHP hotline 2125 1133 had received a total of 825 enquiries from members of the public, and this brings to the accumulative total of 7,303 calls since it was set up on September 21.

                          "A total of 2,252 callers claimed that they or their children had consumed milk products which were confirmed to have been adulterated with melamine, and 666 of the affected people, 356 males and 310 females aged from 1 to 71, claimed to have symptoms of renal problems including dysuria and changes in the frequency of urination.

                          "They have been advised to seek medical attention as soon as possible to ascertain if they were suffering from renal disease," the spokesman said.

                          The remaining 5,051 callers had no history of exposure to melamine adulterated milk products and just asked for general health advice.

                          The CHP hotline, which operates from 9am to 5pm daily, caters for individuals who have consumed milk products contaminated with melamine or those who are experiencing renal symptoms.
                          --

                          View Original Article

                          Comment


                          • #58
                            Re: China: Melamine tainted milk, current situation

                            Melamine milk crisis [FAO]
                            Melamine milk crisis

                            Countries to ensure safe feeding for infants and increase vigilance


                            26 September 2008, Geneva/Rome ?

                            The World Health Organization (WHO) and the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) are urging affected countries to ensure safe feeding of millions of infants following the ongoing melamine milk crisis in China.

                            The two agencies also called on countries to be alert to the possible spread of melamine-contaminated dairy products.

                            Safe feeding
                            "While breastfeeding is the ideal way of providing infants with the nutrients they need for healthy growth and development, it is also critical to ensure that there is an adequate supply of safe powdered infant formula to meet the needs of infants who are not breastfed," said J?rgen Schlundt, Director of the WHO Food Safety Department.

                            Replacing powdered infant formula with other products such as condensed milk, honey mixed with milk, or fresh milk is inappropriate as such products would put at risk the safety and nutritional status of this vulnerable population group, the two agencies advised."

                            Restoring consumer confidence is critical.
                            Melamine-contaminated products should be removed from the food chain in order to prevent further exposure. The safe supply of dairy products needs to be restored immediately,? said Ezzeddine Boutrif, Director of FAO's Nutrition and Consumer Protection Division.

                            WHO recommends that all infants should be fed exclusively with breast milk for the first six months of life. No other liquid or food, not even water, is needed during this period. Thereafter, infants should receive adequate and safe complementary foods while breastfeeding continues up to two years of age and beyond.

                            Increased vigilance
                            Countries should closely monitor their markets, following reports of findings of imported melamine-contaminated products in several countries over the last two weeks.
                            The two agencies highlighted that melamine-contaminated products could reach markets in other countries through both formal and informal trade.
                            Getting information about the origin of a product, up to date recall information or, in some cases, testing for melamine contamination might be considered. If found contaminated, appropriate actions such as product recall and safe disposal should be taken, based on an assessment of the risk to human health.Food safety is not the sole responsibility of public authorities.

                            The food industry is also responsible for ensuring a safe supply of food to the consumer.

                            ?It is critical that the industry strongly invests in food safety and adopts a food safety culture covering the food chain from raw materials through to the final product,? Boutrif said. Incidents such as this not only impact food safety and human health but also put the livelihoods of hundreds of millions of dairy farmers at risk.

                            "There is a need for countries to do major investment in strengthening their food control and food-borne disease surveillance systems as it could minimise the potential occurrence of food safety incidents like this one," Schlundt said.

                            The melamine-contaminated dairy products event first came to the attention of the international organizations on 11 September. Both WHO and FAO have used the International Food Safety Authorities Network (INFOSAN) to inform and update national food safety authorities on this food safety crisis, one of the largest in recent years.

                            Over 54 000 children have sought medical treatment in China related to the consumption of melamine-contaminated infant formula.

                            Almost 12 900 are currently hospitalized.

                            Melamine is commonly used in food contact materials (e.g. containers, labels, etc.) and can also be used in agriculture production such as fertilizer. Whether this has a potential for carry over into food at low concentrations (usually in the range of microgram per kilogram) and could further impact human health may need further evaluation.

                            Melamine alone is of low toxicity, however animal studies have suggested that kidney problems occur when melamine is present in combination with cyanuric acid, a potential impurity of melamine.

                            The level of melamine found in the contaminated infant formula has been as high as 2 560 miligram per kilogram ready-to-eat product, while the level of cyanuric acid is unknown.

                            Contact: Erwin Northoff - Media Relations, FAOerwin.northoff@fao.org - (+39) 06 570 53105(+39) 348 252 3616; Sari Setiogi - Media Relations, WHOSetiogiS@who.int - (+41) 22 791 3576
                            --
                            <cite cite="http://www.fao.org/newsroom/en/news/2008/1000926/index.html">Melamine milk crisis</cite>

                            Comment


                            • #59
                              Re: China: Melamine tainted milk, current situation

                              With regard to post #55, following are notes from Wikipedia:

                              Melamine - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melamine

                              Melamine is a metabolite of cyromazine, a pesticide. It is formed in the body of mammals who have ingested cyromazine.[2] It was also reported that cyromazine is converted to melamine in plants.[3][4]

                              cyromazine - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyromazine

                              Cyromazine is a triazine insect growth regulator used as an insecticide and an acaricide. It is a cyclopropyl derivative of melamine. Cyromazine works by affecting the nervous system of the immature larval stages of certain insects.[2]

                              In veterinary medicine, cyromazine is used as a ectoparasiticide.

                              Cyanuric acid - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyanuric_acid -

                              Cyanuric acid (CYA) was first synthesized by W?hler in 1829 by the thermal decomposition of urea and uric acid.

                              Animal feed

                              FDA permits a certain amount of cyanuric acid to be present in some non-protein nitrogen (NPN) additives used in animal feed and drinking water.[7] Cyanuric acid has been used as NPN. For example, Archer Daniels Midland manufactures an NPN supplement for cattle, which contains biuret, triuret, cyanuric acid and urea.[8]

                              2007 pet food recalls

                              Main article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007_pe...n_pet_sickness - Cyanuric acid is implied in connection to the 2007 pet food recalls, the contamination and wide recall of many brands of cat and dog foods beginning in March 2007. Research has found evidence that cyanuric acid together with melamine forms poorly soluble crystals which can cause renal failure (see Analysis section above).

                              Comment


                              • #60
                                Re: China: Melamine tainted milk, current situation

                                Hong Kong: Latest test results of dairy product samples (with tables) [CFS]

                                The Centre for Food Safety (CFS) today (September 27) released the latest batch of results of melamine tests on dairy products and baby food.


                                Results available today showed that of the 145 samples tested, including cakes, bread, milk and milk beverages produced locally; Mainland frozen confections, raw milk, milk and milk beverages; coffee creamer produced on the Mainland and overseas; and milk powder and baby food from overseas, 141 were satisfactory.

                                Three samples of biscuit were found unsatisfactory.

                                Details are as follows:
                                1. Lotte Koala Strawberry Biscuit (Family Pack) (10 small packs) (net weight: 200g, expiry date: 26.9.2009); level of melamine detected 4.3ppm.
                                2. Lotte Koala's March Chocolate Biscuit (Family Pack) (10 small packs)(net weight: 200g, expiry date: 29.1.2010); level of melamine detected 57ppm.
                                3. Lotte Koala Biscuit (Family Pack)(Chocolate Filled)(Double Chocolate Flavor)(10 small packs)(net weight: 200g, expiry date: 29.1.2010); level of melamine detected - 68ppm.

                                In addition, a sample of milk biscuit (...) (net weight: 168g) was found unsatisfactory with a melamine level of 3ppm detected.

                                The sample was collected by the CFS following up with public??s food complaint.

                                Under the Harmful Substances in Food (Amendment) Regulation 2008 which took effect on September 23, the legal limit for melamine in the above biscuits and milk biscuit (...) is 2.5ppm.

                                "We have already informed the trade of the test results and asked them to stop selling the products concerned. We have also sent warning letters to the retailers and importers concerned, and the importers will recall the affected products," a spokesman for the CFS said.

                                "The CFS will take out prosecution if there is sufficient evidence."

                                According to the standards of the US Food and Drug Administration, the safety reference value (i.e. tolerable daily intake - TDI) for melamine is 0.63mg per kg of body weight per day. For children under the age of 36 months, as they are more sensitive to melamine, the TDI for melamine is 0.32mg per kg of body weight per day.

                                On the sample of Lotte biscuits which was detected with a melamine level of 68ppm, the spokesman said a child weighing 10kg (about 3-year-old) would have to eat about 0.05kg (about 2.5 small packs) of the product a day to reach the TDI.

                                For an adult with average body weight of 60 kg, he will need to consume about0.56kg (about 28 small packs) of the product a day before reaching the TDI.

                                On the milk biscuit (...) sample, a child weighing 10kg (about 3?Vyear-old) would have to eat about 1.1kg (about 6.5 packets) of the product a day to reach the TDI. It would for the same adult to eat about 12.6kg (about 75 packets) of the product a day to reach the TDI.

                                "Based on the levels detected, the public is advised to stop consuming the products concerned," the spokesman said.

                                "Up till now, a total of 66 infant formula have been tested and all were satisfactory.

                                In addition, of the 45 baby food samples tested, 44 were satisfactory and the unsatisfactory sample was announced yesterday.

                                "We are closely monitoring the situation and will continue to collect baby food, other dairy products and products with dairy ingredients for testing," the spokesman said. Information on the test results can be found on CFS's website www.cfs.gov.hk.

                                For enquiries, members of the public can also call CFS's enquiry number 2381 6096 which operates from 9am to 9pm daily.
                                --

                                View Original Article

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X