Do you know vitamin C lowers blood pressure?
Sunday October 4, 2008 (foodconsumer.org) -- Contaminated milk has affected not only
dairy products sold in mainland China, but also many of other
products with or without dairy products in many other countries.
An unsubstantiated report by
etaiwan.com said that packaged food, vegetable, mushroom, celery and
tomato made in china may also be contaminated with the industrial
chemical.
In Taiwan, a food company in Taoyuan
County was reportedly involved in the scandal of melamine
contamination. The strawberry snack rolls the company sent to
authorities for inspection tested positive for melamine. The company
was voluntarily asking the county health department to help recall
the affected snacks.
It is unknown how these snacks were
contaminated with melamine. It is likely though that they contain ed
tainted milk power, which is commonly used in snacks. But again it
remains unknown whether the source of contamination is in China or
elsewhere.
One product called strawberry snack
rolls was found contaminated with 33 parts per million (ppm) of
melamine, and another Kaka Strawberry chocolate rods contained 6 ppm,
health officials said.
The World Health Organization sets the
safety limit for the chemical at 2.5 ppm in most foods for human
consumption.
After notified, health inspectors
rushed to stores and sealed 243 cases of the tainted products in
inventory. An estimated 630 cases of strawberry chocolate rods and
300 cases of strawberry snack rolls were manufactured.
Melamine was found last year in pet
food made in China resulting in deaths of many dogs and cats in the
United States. But tainted human foods had not been reported until
this year.