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Author Topic: (Melamine Suspected) Chinese Officials Say Baby Formula Tied to Kidney Stones  (Read 23718 times)
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menusux
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« Reply #450 on: September 25, 2008, 06:10:24 PM »

http://www.etaiwannews.com/etn/news_content.php?id=748346

eTaiwan News September 26, 2008

Taiwan reports 5 new melamine victims

Number of cases of children with kidney stones is growing

"Amid confusion over the government's overnight loosening of safety standards for melamine-tainted food stuffs, hospitals yesterday reported a growing number of cases of children who might have contracted kidney stones by eating contaminated products. After a two-year-old girl showing a hardening kidney was found in Taichung County on Wednesday, several similar cases surfaced yesterday.

"In Ilan County, the local campus of the Yangming University Hospital said four cases of kidney stones had been discovered, but drinking water and stopping the consumption of contaminated products would likely be enough to cure the patients.

"Two children, a one-year-old boy and a three-year-old girl who had drunk a little-known brand of milk product their mother had brought from Hong Kong for a year were the first two cases, the hospital said. The other two were a mother from China and her three-year-old daughter. The mother had been consuming Chinese milk for years, and had also regularly brought the same brand home for her daughter, the hospital said.

"A 30-year-old woman from Yunlin County who said she drank two to four bags of instant coffee a day showed symptoms of hardening kidneys, doctors at the local campus of National Taiwan University Hospital said.

"Islandwide, doctors found 11 people with kidney stones, though none of the cases can as yet be directly linked to the consumption of tainted dairy products, the Department of Health said."

Two adult cases reported in addition to children.



http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2008/09/25/white-rock-candy.html

CBC September 25, 2008

Canada recalls White Rabbit candies over melamine concerns

"Canadians should not eat, distribute or sell White Rabbit brand candy, a popular Chinese confection that may be tainted with melamine, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency warned Thursday.

"Health officials in Hong Kong and Singapore said they have found trace amounts of melamine, an industrial chemical used to make plastics and fertilizer, in some of the candy.

"The Canadian alert advised importers and distributors to voluntarily recall the products, and retailers to remove it from their shelves. There have been no reports of illness linked to the product in Canada, where melamine is not allowed as a food ingredient.

"In addition to White Rabbit candies, the agency has already singled out Mr. Brown 3-in-1 Instant Coffee and Nissin Cha Cha desserts for possibly being been made with tainted milk products.

"The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said White Rabbit candy has been added to its list of products being inspected at ports of entry, but that no melamine-tainted goods from China of any sort have turned up. Nonetheless, some grocers in the U.S. started removing the popular candies from their shelves."
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« Reply #451 on: September 25, 2008, 06:15:49 PM »

Quote
but that no melamine-tainted goods from China of any sort have turned up.

Unfortunately we won't know until the reported number of kidney problems arise, which could be months down the road.

We were foolish to believe that this was going to end last year, and that it wasn't going to end up in people food. WAIT A MINUTE, we were the ones that have been telling them this all along. Undecided they just refused to listen.

db Undecided
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catbird
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« Reply #452 on: September 25, 2008, 06:24:18 PM »

The White Rabbit candies are available online from any number of Asian foods vendors, even listed with Amazon.  Today, just as an experiment, I placed an online order with a couple of these (went through the shopping cart process, etc., just didn't finalize with "place order" at the end to pay for it, but canceled it instead.)  I did not get any out-of-stock messages, warnings, "not presently available," anything.  I could have bought as many bags of melacandy as I wanted.

So innocent people can go on eating melamine.  It's out of control.  There are absolutely no safeguards.
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catmom5
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« Reply #453 on: September 25, 2008, 06:26:49 PM »

Dear God, it's like a horrible nightmare, only we won't wake up from this one. It's real . . .
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« Reply #454 on: September 25, 2008, 06:32:39 PM »

Ah, come on, folks. In 2007 it was just a few (because the FDA refused to count them) off-the-chart pet owners
crying what happened here about some dumb animals that escaped the government's attention.

Now in 2008 it's just a bunch of poor farmers trying to save a buck in China and their peasant babies. The numbers involved
no doubt being diminished by the Chinese government.

I hope all the legislators and bureaucrats in Washington, D.C., choke on their next mouthful of prime cut beef, that
no one else can any longer afford, because the melamine is in that muscle tissue, too -- oops, sorry, forgot to say
I suspect.

http://itchmoforums.com/recall-nonpet-food/melamine-use-rampant-in-china-feed-business-t6380.0.html;topicseen
Reuters September 25, 2008
Melamine use "rampant" in China feed business

The world's most tragic human field test of the dangers of melamine exposure is occurring right in front of your eyes.
« Last Edit: September 25, 2008, 07:23:21 PM by 3catkidneyfailure » Logged
3catkidneyfailure
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« Reply #455 on: September 25, 2008, 08:19:19 PM »

http://www.nzherald.co.nz:80/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10534315

San Lu milk powder has lethal bacteria
The Gansu Bureau of Quality and Technical Supervision in northwest China issued an emergency notice saying San Lu's formulas for older babies contained enterobacter sakazakii as well as melamine, the Lanzhou Morning Post reported.
Described as lethal, enterobacter sakazakii can cause meningitis or severe gut infections and is recognised by the World Health Organisation as a key pathogen that leads to infant mortality
The newspaper said it was not yet known how or when the bacteria entered the San Lu formula, but there had been no reports of sickness or deaths. ...
Melamine has been found in at least two food items here, but the New Zealand Food Safety Authority says there will not be an import ban of dairy products from China. It also said there would be no recall of White Rabbit Creamy Candy, which it tested and found to contain "unacceptable levels" of melamine.
South Korea yesterday joined more than a dozen countries that have banned the import of all products containing Chinese powdered milk after discovering the chemical in some snacks, and the decision not to do the same here has been slammed by the Consumer NZ and Green Party.



« Last Edit: September 25, 2008, 08:23:55 PM by 3catkidneyfailure » Logged
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« Reply #456 on: September 25, 2008, 08:23:47 PM »

I'm so [edited] pissed! We KNEW this was going to happen. But it's going to take American babies dying before Washington MIGHT wake up. I get sympathetic kidney pains just reading this poo poo. This needs to stop NOW.

I'll be rattling my congress critters cages tomorrow big time. I can no longer protest boycott because I don't buy this poo poo anymore, but I will try and recruit more to boycott. Heh, it's prob a good thing I don't live in DC. You would be catching me on "Breaking News" if I did.

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What the HELL is NZ thinking?!!!!
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3catkidneyfailure
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« Reply #457 on: September 25, 2008, 08:25:45 PM »

NZ is thinking biggest corporation in the country profits, I believe, and global trade agreements, not
unlike the US and the FDA maybe?
« Last Edit: September 25, 2008, 08:29:02 PM by 3catkidneyfailure » Logged
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« Reply #458 on: September 25, 2008, 08:52:12 PM »

Well, I sure hope their health care system is better than ours. Still going to cost them (us) a pretty penny in the long run. Gawd, this makes me insanely crazy mad.

I'm making a new t-shirt:

"No, I'm not your [edited] lab rat!"


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« Reply #459 on: September 25, 2008, 09:19:02 PM »

NZ really blows my mind.
These are the folks who bring you the lamb that's the best and the purest in the world.
These are the folks who banned ethoxyquin laden paprika

Now I'm starting to question whether I want any NZ Lamb..................or anything from there for that matter Angry
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« Reply #460 on: September 25, 2008, 11:33:21 PM »

What about all the pet food that NZ makes? Since they think nothing of their own people eating that candy or drinking any powdered stuff with melamine - how can they even care about pet food then? Maybe they even buy IMO on the cheap animal feed from China and get cut a deal on the price too. Gawd this insanity is never going to stop - how many have to die before anything is done? Have we not had enough beloved pets now gone and how many more babies in other countries are near death that we do not know about?
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« Reply #461 on: September 26, 2008, 01:07:06 AM »

Largest Seattle area Asian grocer relying on international news reports to decide what to pull.

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2008201583_taintedmilk25m.html

China's milk scandal has Seattle-area stores pulling candy, drinks
By Susan Kelleher

Seattle Times consumer-affairs reporter

As the scope of China's tainted-milk scandal widened this week, Asian grocery stores in Seattle's International District and on the Eastside began pulling cases of candies and drinks off their shelves as a precaution against selling products contaminated with the industrial chemical melamine.

Without clear orders from federal authorities, area grocers were left largely to fend for themselves in deciding which products might pose a risk to customers. The chemical melamine was found in numerous Chinese exports — from candy to yogurt to rice balls — and traced to nearly two dozen dairies. In China, the contaminated milk has sickened more than 50,000 people and caused the deaths of four infants.

Uwajimaya, which operates stores in Seattle and Bellevue, relied on news reports from Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan and China to determine which products to pull, said Jason Nakaya, the chain's central grocery manager.

The latest products to come off the shelves are the popular White Rabbit Creamy Candies and a host of beverages that tested positive for melamine in other countries.

"We pulled White Rabbit candies, all powdered coffees and teas, and several drinks," Nakaya said. "We're being significantly more proactive than our suppliers are. Our name is more at risk than our suppliers', and, more important, we don't want anyone to get hurt."

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration added the White Rabbit candies to its list of products being inspected at ports of entry after tests by other governments showed high levels of melamine. But so far the agency said its checks have not turned up any goods from China that contained the chemical.

Nonetheless, local markets are removing popular candies and other products as employees learn about the possible contamination from their customers and the media.

A quick phone survey Wednesday of five merchants in Seattle's International District showed varying responses to the scandal.

Ping Niu of Hoven Foods Co. said she removed White Rabbit candies from the shelves this week after reading newspaper reports about high levels of melamine in the candy, while an employee at Dong Hing Market said she removed the candy after a customer told her the product was made with tainted milk.

Mui Cun, a cashier at Rising Produce, said a representative from the FDA came to the store last week to obtain samples of powdered creamer and condensed milk for testing. She said the store hasn't carried the White Rabbit candies for about three months, and there were no other products she knew of that had been pulled.

Suppliers trying to cut costs are believed to have added melamine to watered-down milk as a thickener. More than a dozen countries have banned or recalled Chinese products containing milk.

Health experts say ingesting a small amount of the chemical poses no danger, but melamine can cause kidney stones and lead to kidney failure. Infants are particularly vulnerable.

Tests done by authorities in New Zealand and Hong Kong found high levels of the chemical in the White Rabbit candies.

The dairy at the center of the scandal is Sanlu Group Co. An investigation into the contamination found that Sanlu received complaints about its infant formula as early as December 2007 and covered up the problem for months, state media reported earlier this week.

The Chinese government has taken control of Sanlu, which is 43 percent owned by New Zealand's Fonterra Cooperative, and shut down its operations.

Material from The Associated Press is included in this report. Susan Kelleher: skelleher@seattletimes.com; 206-464-2508.

Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
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« Reply #462 on: September 26, 2008, 01:12:39 AM »

Now in Japanese cookies and Taiwan Pizza Hut


http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2008197980_apaschinataintedmilk.html

China milk scandal hits Japan firm, Taiwan victims
By ANITA CHANG

Associated Press Writer

BEIJING - China's tainted milk scandal continues to expand beyond its borders as three Taiwanese children and a mother are sick with kidney stones, a Japanese confectioner's cookies are found to be contaminated and the European Union joins other countries in banning imports of baby food containing Chinese milk.

Liu Yi-lien, health chief of the Ilan County government in eastern Taiwan, says the two 3-year-old girls and a one-year-old boy all have been traveling frequently between Taiwan and China with their parents. One of the children's mothers also has kidney stones.

If a link is established between these kidney problems and melamine-tainted milk, they would be the first such cases diagnosed outside of China or its territories of Hong Kong and Macau since the contaminated milk scandal erupted this month.

However, the infants may have been consuming formula purchased in China, not Taiwan.

Liu said they all consumed Chinese milk, but that more tests were need to establish a link to their kidney stones.

Four children in China have died from consuming the products contaminated with the industrial chemical melamine and more than 50,000 have been sickened.

Five other children have become ill as a result of using melamine-tainted products in the Chinese territories of Hong Kong and Macau.

Meanwhile, Koala's March cookies made by Lotte China Foods Co., a Tokyo conglomerate, were found to be contaminated with the toxic chemical melamine. The Japanese confectioner exports cookies to the Chinese territory of Macau

Macau's government said late Thursday that they had found levels of melamine 24 times the safety limit in the cookies.

An official at Lotte (China) Investment Co. Ltd. in Shanghai said Friday that previous inspections had not shown any problems.

"The range of the inspections covered all the products sold domestically, including the Bear chocolate-filled cookies mentioned in the report. The outcome was all fine," said Guo Hongming, a legal assistant in the Lotte Shanghai's corporate planning department.

"But now that it tested positive in Macau, we find it necessary to do the inspections all over again." she said.

Hong Kong supermarkets also removed the popular Japanese brand of chocolate-filled cookies from shelves Friday.

Hundreds of international food companies have set up operations in China in recent years, exposing them to the country's notorious product safety problems.

The food safety crisis in China started with melamine-tainted infant formula. It has since spread to other milk products and has triggered recalls and bans on Chinese food goods around the world.

The European Union banned imports of baby food containing Chinese milk Thursday as a toxic chemical that was illegally added to China's dairy supplies turned up in candy and other Chinese-made goods that were quickly pulled from stores worldwide.

The 27-nation EU adds to the growing list of countries that have banned or recalled Chinese dairy products because of the contamination. In addition to the ban, the European Commission called for more checks on other Chinese food imports.

All European Union imports of products containing more than 15 percent of milk powder will have to be tested under the new rules due to come into force Friday.

Food safety experts in the EU, which imports about 21,500 tons of Chinese confectionary products, said there is only a limited risk in Europe from the food imports. But the European Commission says it is acting as a precaution in the face of the growing health scare.

The maker of one of China's most popular candies said Friday it had halted production because of suspected melamine contamination. White Rabbit brand creamy candies have already been pulled from shelves around Asia and in Britain.

"It's a tragedy for the Chinese food industry and a big lesson for us as it ruined the time-honored brand," Ge Junjie, a vice president Bright Foods (Group) Co. Ltd., was quoted as saying by the Shanghai Daily.

Bright Foods' subsidiary Guangshengyuan produces White Rabbit.

Ge was quoted as saying by the official Xinhua News Agency that the company was waiting for test results from the Shanghai Entry-Exit Inspection and Quarantine Bureau.

"We decided to halt all sales of White Rabbit candy, although the test results have not yet come out," Ge said.

Concern about White Rabbit candies has also spread to South America, where Surinamese health authorities ordered food markets to stop selling it as a precautionary measure.

"Up to this point, we have no indication that these candies are tainted but we did not want to take any chances," said Lesley Resida, director of public health, describing Suriname's decision as a precautionary measure.

White Rabbit candies are widely available in Suriname, where people of Chinese heritage make up roughly 8 percent of the population.

In Taiwan, where there have been huge concerns about the safety of milk and related products imported from China, Pizza Hut said Friday it had suspended supplying cheese powder found to be contaminated by melamine.

Wu Yu-ping, an official of Pizza Hut's Taiwan branch, said the tainted cheese was supplied by Taiwan's Kaiyuan Company, but its source is not known.

On Thursday, the European Union banned imports of baby food containing Chinese milk. The move by the 27-nation EU adds to the growing list of countries that have banned or recalled Chinese dairy products because of the contamination.

Health experts say ingesting a small amount of melamine poses no danger, but in larger doses, the chemical - used to make plastics and fertilizer - can cause kidney stones and lead to kidney failure. Infants are particularly vulnerable.

Outside Shanghai, three zoo babies were found to have developed kidney stones after being nursed with tainted milk powder for more than a year. A lion cub and two baby orangutans were sickened after drinking infant formula made by the Sanlu Group Co., said Zhang Xu, a veterinarian with the Hangzhou Zhangxu Animal Hospital.

---

Annie Huang in Hong Kong also contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
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« Reply #463 on: September 26, 2008, 06:06:56 AM »

well this is making front page Yahoo...yeah...it is still in the news...and they even note breaking news and to check back...so maybe this will stay in the headline (I hope)

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080926/ap_on_re_as/as_china_tainted_milk

By ANITA CHANG, Associated Press Writer
20 minutes ago
 


BEIJING - The Hong Kong government says it has found traces of melamine in baby cereals and crackers made in China in an expanding scandal over Chinese milk and other food products tainted with the industrial chemical.

In China, authorities said Friday that a Taiwanese mother and three young children with kidney stones may have been poisoned by Chinese milk products tainted with melamine, and two Japanese confectioners' products were also found to be contaminated.

Hong Kong's government said the contaminated baby vegetable formula cereal are made by Heinz. It also says melamine was found in the steamed potato wasabi crackers produced by Silang House. Both were made in China, it said.


THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

 
« Last Edit: September 26, 2008, 06:09:21 AM by Carol » Logged

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« Reply #464 on: September 26, 2008, 06:26:22 AM »

Did I read above in this thread that New Zealand FOUND melamine in the White Rabbit candy and is NOT recalling it?  I can't find the article now.

It's a shame that owners of Asian stores here get no direction from our regulatory agencies and have to listen to foreign news and customers to attempt to decipher what items to pull from shelves.  At least some are trying to protect people here if these products are contaminated, although there are no specific dictates for store owners on what or if to pull products.  They have to be applauded for that.

Thank you for the breaking news story, Carol.  I'm afraid this poison made its way around the world months ago, and now everyone is back tracking to chase these potentially toxic products down -- same as the pet food last year.

Since our "food" is not made with whole identifiable ingredients any more, but with derivatives, powders, concentrates, proteins, etc., the melamine could be in about any package a consumer picks up.  So much for the DILUTION THEORY...
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