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sticky Post Product Recalls Here!

KayMMIV

Jan. 12, 2008 at 12:58 PM by KayMMIV
posted to CafeMom Consumer Review

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The title says it all, here's where you can post any info you might have about a recall or possible recalls- things we should know about products. It was brought to my attention WeagleWeagle that we needed a place for this.

Thanks WeagleWeagle!

here's the website for product recalls http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/prerel/category/toy.html

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Written by KayMMIV on Jan. 12, 2008 at 12:58 PM Send KayMMIV a message

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KayMMIV

by KayMMIV on Jan. 12, 2008 at 12:58 PM


Quoting WeagleWeagle:

We used this with our colicky baby as well. It did wonders! But then my MIL warned us about an ingredient in it that could be linked to heart disease. I was doing some research and came across this:

FDA is warning consumers not to consume Baby’s Bliss Gripe Water, apple flavor, with a code of 26952V and expiration date of October 2008 (shown as “10/08” on the label), distributed by MOM Enterprises, Inc., of San Rafael, Calif. FDA confirmed through laboratory analysis the presence of cryptosporidium after investigating the illness of a 6-week-old infant in Minnesota who consumed the product. Cryptosporidium is a parasite that can cause intestinal infections.
http://www.emaxhealth.com/50/16290.html

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KayMMIV

by KayMMIV on Jan. 12, 2008 at 1:01 PM


Quoting mom2ljh:

http://www.ktvu.com/news/15017759/detail.html

Pittsburg Family Makes Disturbing Discovery In Baby Food

A Bay Area mother is telling KTVU about a stomach-churning discovery she made Tuesday night when she claims to have found maggots in not one but two jars of baby food as she was preparing to feed her infant.
The family lives in Pittsburg, but the mother says she bought the baby food at a Target store in San Ramon. The parents are saying the problem was with two jars of Gerber brand food.
It was dinnertime Tuesday night when mother Denetra Tims went to the cupboard for a jar of baby food to feed her 8-month-old daughter Nyla. That's when she says she made a sickening discovery.
"I went to pull it out and then I looked at it and I was like, what is that? And I just thought it was a piece of something on there," says Tims. "And I just saw a little squiggle and I was like 'Oh my God. That's a maggot.'"
Tims showed KTVU the jars, now wrapped tightly in a bag. Right around the lid of the Gerber's sweet potato and turkey baby food, you can see the white wormy shapes of maggots snugly nestled underneath the plastic seal.
"So you could see it stretching out and moving back. I was just totally disgusted," explains the disturbed mother.
Her husband had the same reaction: "It was very disgusting seeing the maggots, especially right next to your baby," says Shawn Tims.
He said he'd just fed his baby girl Gerber baby food from a different jar the night before, which only added to his consternation.
"I'm thinking 'Did she possibly eat one? Was there one in her food?'" says the little girl's father.
They immediately checked the other bottles they had to see if there were more maggots.
"And I pulled out the last one and it had two on them. So two bottles out of the four [had maggots]," says Tims.
The Tims showed KTVU the cash register receipt from the Target store in San Ramon. It indicates they bought it a week ago on January 3rd. Shawn Tims says he called the Gerber company and says the operator told him Gerber wasn't to blame.
"She said it probably happened during the distribution or the stocking of the actual store," explains Tims.
But hours later, Gerber called back to say they would send someone out to inspect the bottles and get the tracking number to trace the problem.
"There's other people that I'm sure have bottles that could be in the same conditions, not even here but in other places as well," says Tims.
The Tims say they just want their money back and hope someone will figure out what happened. They also have words of advice for other parents:
"Definitely make sure you look at your packaging first before you buy anything, because obviously they don't check it."
KTVU contacted Gerber but have not received any response. Members of the staff at the Target store where the baby food was bought say they're not allowed to respond on camera, but say they would be glad to work with Gerber and give the Tims a refund.

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WeagleWeagle

by WeagleWeagle on Jan. 12, 2008 at 1:08 PM

You're welcome!

That story about the Gerber food is seriously disturbing! Especially when they tried to claim it wasn't their fault. If the maggots were in the bottle, under the lid and the plastic wrap, that would definately be a packaging error. I'm interested to see what happens!
KayMMIV

by KayMMIV on Jan. 12, 2008 at 1:19 PM


Quoting WeagleWeagle:

You're welcome!

That story about the Gerber food is seriously disturbing! Especially when they tried to claim it wasn't their fault. If the maggots were in the bottle, under the lid and the plastic wrap, that would definately be a packaging error. I'm interested to see what happens!

i know! when i read it i was like WTH how is it from stocking, i use to work in a grocery store and there's no way to get maggots into something stocking! I have some organic gerber food i'm afraid to feed ds til i find out what's gonna happen with this and if there's a recall. it's in the plastic not the jars but still.

www.myspace.com/kaymmiv

Green & Simple Living- www.cafemom.com/group/PNO

Join moms of all ages w/ kids of all ages who don't always parent 'by the book' & discuss your parenting choices w/out criticism
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WeagleWeagle

by WeagleWeagle on Jan. 12, 2008 at 1:25 PM


Quoting KayMMIV:


Quoting WeagleWeagle:

You're welcome!

That story about the Gerber food is seriously disturbing! Especially when they tried to claim it wasn't their fault. If the maggots were in the bottle, under the lid and the plastic wrap, that would definately be a packaging error. I'm interested to see what happens!

i know! when i read it i was like WTH how is it from stocking, i use to work in a grocery store and there's no way to get maggots into something stocking! I have some organic gerber food i'm afraid to feed ds til i find out what's gonna happen with this and if there's a recall. it's in the plastic not the jars but still.
Yeah, seriously disturbing stuff. We just bought a food processor recently and while I was pureeing some veggies to freeze (i'm trying the whole, sneak stuff into the kid's food) I thought, "Man, I wish we had this when the kids were eating baby food." I sooo would have been making their food.
KayMMIV

by KayMMIV on Nov. 1, 2008 at 1:39 PM

So this has been a hot topic around cafemom for a bit now, especially as halloween draws closer and we as mothers worry about what our children are ingesting. there's been a new fear added this year to check for, melamine. 

here's some info to help out with what's safe and what isn't and what the heck is going on.

 

DOH’s list of milk and chocolate brands that are melamine free

The Department of Health (DOH) had already cleared a total of 49 dairy products (as of this posting).

These are the milk and chocolate brands that are free of melamine according to the DoH:

Anchor Lite Milk,
Anlene High Calcium Low Fat Milk,
Bear Brand Instant,
Chichok Milk Chocolate,
Farmland Skim Milk,
Jinwei Drinks,
Jolly Cow Pure Fresh Milk,
Kiddie Soya,
Milk Egg Delight,
Lactogen 1 DHA Infant Formula,
M&M Peanut Chocolate Candies,
Milk boy,
Nestogen 2 DHA Follow-up Formula,
Nestogen 3 DHA Follow-Up Formula,
Nido 3+ Prebio with DHA,
Nido Full Cream Milk Powder,
Nido Junior,
No- Sugar Chocolate of Isomaltooligosaccharide,
Nutri-Express Milk Drink,
PURA UHT Fresh Milk,
Snickers Fresh Roasted in Caramel & Soft Nougatin Thick Milk Chocolate,
Vitasoy Soya Bean Milk,
Wahaha Orange,
Want-Want Milk Drink (Red Can),
Windmil Skim Milk Powder,
Yinlu Milk Peanut,
Yogee,
Yoghurt Flavor Milk Drink
Anmum Materna Milk Powder Chocolate Flavor (400g)
Bear Brand Choco (300g)
Bear Brand Sterilized Milk (200ml)
Cadbury Choclairs
Carnation Calcium Plus Non-fat Milk Powder
Klim Instant Full Cream Milk Powder
Milk Chocolate Bar (40g)
Monmilk Breakfast Milk Walnut Milk Beverage
Monmilk Hi-calcium Low fat milk (1L)
Monmilk Deluxe Pure Milk
Nestle Chocolate Flavor Ice cream
Nestle Dairy Farm Pure Milk
Nestle Fresh Milk (1L)
Nestle Kitkat
Nestle Milk chocolate (40g)
Nestle Pops Ice cream
Nestle Vanilla Flavor Ice cream
Nestogen 1 DHA
Nesvita Cereal Milk Drink
Blue Tree Express Milk Drink or Green Apple Flavor (500ml)
Prime Roast Instant Nutritious Cereal (28g)

 

Melamine Contaminated Food List

Posted in Science at 1:00 pm by David Bradley -- 18 Comments; add your comment

 

melamine-candy via LA TimesBefore you check out the following items, please click here first to grab the Sciencebase newsfeed. I’ll be updating the melamine news over the next few days, and the RSS newsfeed system allows you to keep up to date with the Sciencebase site without having to check back by adding our headlines to your Google account, My Yahoo, Bloglines or your active bookmarks in your browser.

As the melamine in milk products from China problem continues to grow apace, Sciencebase presents a succinct list of melamine contaminated food list culled from the most recent news results on the subject. This is by no means an exhaustive list nor is it a condemnation of any particular products, it’s here merely to raise awareness of what is happening with regard to the melamine in milk scandal.

  • Powdered baby milk.
  • HK finds melamine in Chinese-made cheesecake.
  • Cookies With Melamine Found in Netherlands.
  • Mr Brown coffee products.
  • Manufacturing giant Unilever recalls melamine tainted tea. CNN is also reporting that the Hong Kong authorities Sunday (October 5) announced that two recalled candy products made by British confectioner Cadbury had high levels of melamine.
  • Melamine Detected in Two More Ritz Snacks.
  • More Chinese-made sweets recalled in Japan.
  • White Rabbit brand Chinese candy contaminated: Asian health officials.
  • Lipton, Glico and Ritz the latest businesses to be affected by milk powder scandal.
  • Hong Kong finds traces of melamine in Cadbury products.
  • Recalled Melamine Milk Products include Asian versions of Bairong grape cream crackers, Dove chocolate, Dreyers cake mix, Dutch Lady candy, First Choice crackers, Kraft Oreo wafer sticks, M&Ms, Magnum ice cream, Mentos bottle yoghurt, Snickers funsize, Yili hi-cal milk, Youcan sesame snacks and others. Testing of some of those has already proven negative.
  • Melamine Found in More China-Made Products, including Heinz DHA+AA baby cereal.
  • 305 Chinese dairy-based products temporarily banned in Korea.
  • US bloggers have gone so far as to uncover dozens of products recalled in China that were still on the shelves of their local supermarkets.
  • 31 new milk powder brands found tainted.

Just for the record, this is not, as was suggested on a couple of blogs linking here, a definitive, complete list. I will update it as and when new information comes to light. Check out the previous posts for more information in the background to this news story and for further discussion on the issues surrounding the melamine in milk products scandal: Melamine Scandal Widens and (2008-09-29) Milky Melamine.

 

http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-melamine.htm

What is Melamine?


Melamine is an organic compound that is often combined with formaldehyde to produce melamine resin, a synthetic polymer which is fire resistant and heat tolerant. Melamine resin is a very versatile material with a highly stable structure. Uses for melamine include whiteboards, floor tiles, kitchenware, fire retardant fabrics, and commercial filters. Melamine can be easily molded while warm, but will set into a fixed form. This property makes it ideally suited to certain industrial applications.

Melamine resin is manufactured by mixing urea with formaldehyde under heat and pressure. The substances begin to polymerize and are forced into a mold which will create the desired shape. Under pressure, melamine releases water, which could make the plastic unstable if it is not removed. The materials finish polymerizing and create a finished product, melamine resin.

Melamine resin is known as a thermoset plastic, because the plastic is fixed after molding. If exposed to enough heat, melamine will melt. For this reason, melamine dishware should not be exposed to high temperatures like those in the oven and microwave. However, the plastic is able to withstand higher temperatures than other plastics. Because it is a thermoset plastic, melamine resin is difficult to recycle.

Melamine can be made into a foam product. Melamine foam has a distinctive structure composed of stacked bubble shapes, which are extremely hard and therefore can easily clean a wide variety of substances. Melamine foam is marketed under a variety of commercial names including Magic Eraser, a cleaning tool well known for removing scuffs and dirt from a wide range of surfaces.

Melamine resin is used in Formica and similar construction products made from composite materials. Formica is made using melamine resin, which is used to coat the fibers in the upper layer of the construction product. The melamine resin makes the end result heat resistant, so that hot objects can be set on the counter without concern. The surface of the material is designed to be easily wiped and cleaned, creating a long lived household product.

Melamine also plays a role in a wide range of flame resistant materials. These include textiles used in upholstery and the uniforms worn by firemen. Thermal liners, heat resistant gloves, and aprons to protect from splashback of hot substances are made using melamine. Melamine will protect a wearer from heat hazards, and will help to resist the spread of fire in aircraft and buses by providing a fire blocker.

Melamine is also used in the manufacture of some filters. The material is porous and will admit substances to pass through, but can be used to filter out particles of a particular size. Melamine filters are capable of handling a high capacity and can be used in hot environments due to the heat resistance of melamine. Melamine filters are also extremely efficient.

Aside from common commercial uses, melamine became a topic of much discussion in early 2007, when veterinary scientists determined it to be the cause of hundreds of pet deaths, because of pet food contamination. Prior to these reports, melamine had been regarded as non-toxic or minimally toxic. However, because of the unexplained presence of melamine in wheat gluten added to mass-produced dog and cat foods, it is the most likely cause. Pet owners report symptoms that are commonly associated with renal failure, which could be explained by the ammonia that may result from the digestion of the melamine.

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