38 poultry farms in Indiana given contaminated feed
WASHINGTON, April 30 (Reuters) - The U.S. government said on Monday 38 poultry farms in Indiana were given contaminated feed in early February containing melamine, with some of the animals likely to have entered the food supply.
The U.S. Agriculture Department and the Food and Drug Administration said there was a "low-risk" to humans and no food recalls were expected at this time. They are uncertain how many animals were involved or entered the food supply.
Pet food tainted with melamine, a chemical used in plastics and fertilizer, was found in feed given to hogs. Last week, USDA said around 6,000 hogs in six states -- California, Kansas, New York, North Carolina, South Carolina and Utah -- may have been given the contaminated feed.
Low risk? Last week the FDA said they'd never studied melamine in humans - so how can they say it's low risk?
1 comment:
may be the melamine in chickens is fit for humans, but how about pets? Many of the recaled products have "chicken" as the main source of protein, and people, including myself, feed homemade diets based on chicken to our dogs. Is this a jike, or what?
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