FDA Rules How Much Melamine Is Too Much

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By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter
Friday, October 3, 2008; 12:00 AM

FRIDAY, Oct. 3 (HealthDay News) -- With the Chinese milk products-melamine scandal generating fresh headlines, U.S. health officials on Friday unveiled what they consider acceptable levels of contamination with the industrial chemical.

The bottom line: No amount of melamine is safe in infant formula.

For all other foods, only amounts less than 2.5 parts per million are risk free, U.S. Food and Drug Administration officials said.

"For infant formula, we don't have sufficient information to be able to establish a level below which we have no concern," said Dr. Stephen Sundlof, director of the FDA's Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition. "For food other than infant formula, we do have sufficient information that we can establish what our levels of public health concern are."

Since early September, melamine-contaminated baby formula has sickened more than 54,000 children in China and is being blamed for at least four deaths. The chemical is typically used as a component in plastic but can be used to seemingly boost protein levels in foods.

The chemical has also turned up in dairy products sold across Asia and, to a lesser extent, Europe and the United States. It has been detected in candies, chocolates and coffee drinks. Authorities in California and Connecticut found melamine in White Rabbit candies imported from China.

To date, there have been no reports of illness from contaminated Chinese milk products in the United States, Sundlof said.

"There are no approved uses for melamine to be added to food in the United States or anywhere else that I am aware of," Sundlof said. "The fact that it was an intentionally added makes it even worse."

All of the information from China indicates that the chemical was intentionally added to milk and milk powder, Sundlof said. "It's a way of committing economic fraud. It is a way of taking milk and watering it down, then adding melamine to make it appear that it is milk," he said.

According to Sundlof, none of the five manufacturers that supplies infant formula to the United States uses any milk or milk products from China. But, there's a chance that contaminated infant formula may be circulating in Asian communities in the United States.

"We have conducted over 1,890 visits around the United States to local Asian markets looking for infant formula from China, and to date, we have not found any," Sundlof said. "Sometimes these products arrive by mail from relatives," he said.

Because melamine is a component in plastics, Sundlof said, "There is melamine dinnerware, cups, and even Formica countertops contain melamine. But the amount of melamine that actually transfers from those products into the food is very, very small."


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