Chinese Government Says Baby Formula Did Not Cause Early Breast Development

The Chinese health ministry has found no evidence that milk powder is to blame for early breast development in three infant girls in the South-Central part of the country.

The ministry says an analysis of 73 samples of infant formula did not detect traces of inappropriate hormones, contradicting Chinese media reports that tainted milk had led to the cases of early puberty, The New York Times reports.

Earlier this month, the babies’ families claimed that the girls had grown breasts after drinking formula made by a company called Synutra International. The babies had levels of the hormones that produce breast milk as high as those found in adult women.

The analysis included samples from milk powder made by Synutra, as well as a sample from powder at one of the babies’ homes.

But parents in China are still worried, and have not forgotten a health scare that occurred two years ago, when Chinese milk powder tainted with melamine, an industrial chemical, killed six infants and made 300,000 sick.

“There’s no way I’m using milk formula, whether it’s from China or abroad,” Wang Gang, the father of a 1-year-old girl who had elevated hormones, told The Los Angeles Times.

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