http://www.snopes.com/medical/toxins/enfalac.asp

Baby Boom

Claim:   A mixture of Enfalac baby formula and dog food caused a toddler's stomach to explode.

Status:   False.

Example:   [Collected via e-mail, 2000]

I'm a long-time journal reader, and I know that a lot of the journallers I read have just had babies. So I have to pass along this warning. My aunt works at the emergency room at the Children's Hospital in Los Angeles.

Well, a few weeks ago a woman came in with her six month old daughter, probably the sickest baby she'd ever seen. The doctors examined her and thought she might have appendicitis, so they sent her for an ultrasound.

Well, the minute they pressed on her belly, the baby stopped screaming and died right there. She died instantly. Everybody was horrified, and the poor mother was nearly out of her mind.

So they did an exam to try and find out what happened, because the doctors had never seen anything like this before. When they did the exam, they discovered that the baby's stomach had exploded!! They took a lot of samples, and when the results came back, nobody could believe it.

It turns out that the mom had given her baby Enfalac baby formula, and put her on the floor to play while she caught up on her housework. Well, the baby crawled over and was chewing on a little bit of leftover dog food when she got sick and started crying.

It turns out that Enfalac is still being tested, and it says right on the can not to mix it with penalathelyne phosphate, which is in about every single dog food there is. Nobody ever even imagined that the two could get mixed together, but they did, and the result was just a tragedy.

I heard that the mother is suing Enfalac right now, and that maybe the police are going to charge them with something, but everybody wants to keep it quiet. I just couldn't live with myself if I did that, so please, please don't buy Enfalac baby formula. It comes in a pink and blue can, with the name spelled out in yellow ribbons. Please pass this on! Don't let this happen again!!!

Origins:   Up until this item, Enfalac's primary connection to the world of urban legends was that they had fallen
for the "Mozart effect" canard and announced that they were teaming up with the Grammy Foundation to distribute a "Smart Symphonies" CD to new mothers. (The canard being that "research" had indicated that "babies unconsciously respond to the qualities of classical music, giving them a head start on developing the skills they will need to be proficient in science, math and problem-solving.") Now they've joined Alka-Seltzer in the heady league of products that supposedly cause stomachs to explode, with the usual "hush-hush" conspiracy theory thrown in to boot.

Enfalac is a baby formula product marketed by Mead Johnson. It is well out of the "test" phase and doesn't cause stomachs to explode, with or without dog food. This rumor is so far removed from anything even remotely plausible that it must surely be the product of maliciousness rather than misinformation.

A quick rundown of the issues: What to make of all this? People are to willing to believe the worst about infant formulas these days from hearing about the aggressive marketing ploys that Nestle used to push baby formula in third-world countries, a product that reportedly led to the deaths of many infants from malnutrition. Whatever the motive for this spurious "warning," it's not hard to see why at least some people would be willing to believe it.

Last updated:   30 December 2005

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