U.S. FDA working to allow overseas infant formula beyond shortage

Reuters

Published Jul 06, 2022 02:29PM ET

Updated Jul 06, 2022 05:11PM ET

(Reuters) -The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is looking at ways to allow overseas manufacturers of baby formula to keep selling in the country beyond the current shortage, the health regulator said on Wednesday.

The FDA in May said it would allow baby formula imports until Nov. 14 to ease a shortage that had left parents scrambling to feed their babies.

The agency plans to issue further guidance in September on how companies that have been temporarily allowed to ship baby formula to the United States could meet the agency's requirements to continue to supply beyond mid-November.

Abbott Laboratories (NYSE:ABT)' last month stopped production of some speciality baby formula in its plant in Michigan due to severe thunderstorms and heavy rains, just days after restarting the plant that has been at the centre of the baby formula crisis.

The need to diversify and strengthen the supply chain is more important that ever, the FDA said.

"The recent shutdown of a major infant formula plant, compounded by unforeseen natural weather events, has shown just how vulnerable the supply chain has become," the agency said.