Johnson & Johnson has been fighting a rearguard action against
claims its talc products contain harmful asbestos for years, and has
been rocked by an FDA study which found “sub-trace” levels of the
substance in a Baby Powder product.
The company has kicked off a voluntary recall of one lot of its Baby
Powder bottles produced and shipped in the US last year, whilst also
launching an investigation into the whether the offending product is
genuine or counterfeit.
People who have purchased bottle of Johnson’s Baby Powder with the
lot number 22318RB, a production run which included 33,000 bottles, are
advised to discontinue using the product and can contact the company for
a refund.
Testing by the US regulator found levels of chrysotile asbestos
contamination in samples from a bottle purchased online, according to
J&J, which says it is also investigating whether the product was
unsealed and may have been tampered with.
It also said that testing by the FDA as recently as a month ago found
no asbestos in its talc products. The latest test on the online-bought
product found an asbestos level of 0.00002 per cent, while a second Baby
Powder sample from a different lot tested negative for asbestos.
The FDA said it stands by its tests, pointing out that during talc
mining “if…sites are not selected carefully and steps are not taken to
purify the talc ore sufficiently, the talc may be contaminated with
asbestos.”
Asbestos is a known carcinogen that has been linked to mesothelioma,
and aggressive form of lung cancer, and J&J has been hit by a number
of lawsuits over the years claiming that its talc products were
responsible for cancer.
Last year it was ordered to pay $417m to one plaintiff who blamed it
for her cervical cancer, but a few months ago won the right to a retrial
on appeal.
The talc used in J&J’s products is sourced from mines in China by
Imerys Talc America, a subsidiary of French company Imerys SA that is
also a defendant in some of the talc litigation that it still ongoing in
the US.
https://www.securingindustry.com/cosmetics-and-personal-care/j-j-to-test-whether-talc-product-with-asbestos-is-counterfeit/s106/a10898/#.Xa3hfWYpDIV
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