We set a voluntary safety standard 10 times stricter than the prior industry baseline. Then we funded independent research at UW-Madison so the data behind that decision exists publicly.
Dr. Kathy Glass explains what the funded research is finding so far, and why this baseline matters now that the World Health Organization is putting together a global risk assessment for Clostridium botulinum in powdered infant formula.
Headline finding: most products on the market are very clean, less than 10 colony forming units per gram. The baseline is good. The work to make it better is just starting.
In this episode:
- Why this baseline data did not exist before
- What the UW-Madison research is finding
- Why the WHO is now building a global risk assessment
- Why few laboratories are equipped to do this testing
Part 6 of 7 in our infant formula safety series with Dr. Kathy Glass.
