Business & Tech
Baby Formula Shortage Causes Connecticut Parents To Scramble
Baby Formula Shortage: 5 Things Connecticut Parents Need To Know
CONNECTICUT — It's a horror show: Combine a deluge of pandemic supply chain kinks with an onslaught of baby formula recalls and the result is a vise that's squeezing the state's youngest and most vulnerable citizens.
Even in some major drugstores where you can still find baby formula, some are limiting purchases. Citing "increased demand and various supplier issues," a Walgreens spokesperson told Patch that its customers are limited to three infant and toddler formula products per transaction. CVS has a similar policy, and Target is limiting customers to four baby formula products per transaction.
It gets worse: Most of the ingredients for baby formula are made from cow's milk (but don't substitute it; more about that later), and the U.S. Department of Agriculture has caculated that milk production will decline by about 300 million pounds from last year. Labor shortages and transportation problems are compounding the problem, along with the Abbott Nutrition recall of certain lots of Similac Alimentum and EleCare infant formulas produced at its Sturgis, Michigan, plant.
Find out what's happening in Across Connecticutfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The retail data collection company Datasembly said in a mid-April report that its hyperlocal look at baby formula supplies across the country showed an out-of-stock rate of 31 percent. That's up precipitously from a rate that fluctuated between 2 percent and 8 percent in the first half of 2021, then jumped to 23 percent in January.
The Hartford-New Haven metropolitan area is among those hardest hit, according to Datasembly's data. For the week beginning April 3, it was among 12 major metro areas that had an out-of-stock rate higher than 40 percent. The others were Baltimore, Charlotte, Des Moines, Greenville, Houston, Minneapolis, Nashville, New Orleans Mobile, Oahu, San Antonio, and Seattle.
Find out what's happening in Across Connecticutfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Statewide, Connecticut does not fare much better. It was among seven states with an OOS rate above 40 percent, joining Delaware, Montana, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Texas, and Washington. Twenty more states had OOS ratings between 30-40 percent during the same time period.
"Inflation, supply chain shortages, and product recalls have brought an unprecedented amount of volatility for baby formula," Datasembly founder and CEO Ben Reich said in a statement on the company's website. "We expect to continue to see the baby formula category being dramatically affected by these conditions."
He expects the trend to continue through 2022.
The shortage is particularly acute for families whose babies need specialized formula. Dr. Magna Dias, a pediatrician and associate professor at Yale School of Medicine, told NPR that switching to another brand isn't a problem for parents of healthy babies.
Dias told NPR's Ayesha Rascoe the shortage of specialty formulas "is where I think, as a pediatrician, I have the most worry — that’s where we’re having our critical shortages in terms of supply — and also because those babies generally have been given a specific formula for a reason, because they're not able to tolerate other formulas."
Parents who need those formulas should consult their pediatrician about options, Dias advised. "And more so than everybody else, you know, there’s the importance of planning ahead when you require a specialty formula," she said.
Below are five things parents need to know:
1. Order Directly From The Manufacturer
Parents magazine recommends checking the manufacturer’s website for the store locator, then calling ahead to make sure the product is in stock.
Also from Parents: Order directly from the manufacturer or trusted online retailers. Some third-party sellers may charge higher prices, consumer advocates warn.
2. Proceed With Caution
The Infant Nutrition Council of America cautioned parents to be careful about alternative sourcing, warning on its website that infant formula sold at flea markets, internet auction sites and some e-commerce sites "may have been improperly stored or shipped, which can negatively affect the quality of the formula."
"Be sure to always look for any punctures, dents or evidence of potential tampering, and check the use by date on each container of formula before purchasing and/or using."
Also, be careful about DIY formula recipes found online. According to a study published by Cambridge University Press, an analysis of blogs conducted using Google search showed homemade infant formula may contain harmful ingredients.
3. Check With A Food Bank
Local food banks, pantries and other programs supported by Feeding America, the nation’s largest domestic hunger relief organization, often have infant formula.
Another option: Parents can call their local 211 service to be connected with a community resources specialist who can help them find infant formula.
In Connecticut, residents can find out the address of the food pantry nearest them using this interactive map.
4. Don't Water Down Formula
Some parents are trying to stretch formula by watering it down, which Dias said is a dangerous mistake that has sent some babies "to the emergency room seizing."
"It is a particular worry about parents doing substitutes or trying to stretch the formula out," Dias told Rascoe. "And there's a couple of worries there. One — your baby may not be getting enough nutrition if you're not giving them all the calories that they need.
"And then the other thing is that babies — when they're little, their kidneys are not mature. And for that reason, they need that perfect formulation. Otherwise, it could actually cause them to get very sick and have to come to the hospital."
5. Don't Substitute Cow's Milk
Milk is one of the main ingredients in baby formula, but don't switch babies over to it, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says. Not only does it not have the nutrients infants need, babies' kidneys can't handle cow's milk.
Babies can be switched to whole milk when they're a year or a year and a half old, Dr. Steven Abrams, a professor of pediatrics at Dell Medical School at the University of Texas at Austin, told Forbes. Toddlers just shy of that age can be switched with few problems, he said.
But "infants less than 12 months old should not be given whole milk since it can cause gastrointestinal bleeding and can lead to anemia and digestive problems," Dr. Peggy Chapman, a pediatrician with One Medical in New York City, told Forbes.
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.