Johnson & Johnson’s Baby Shampoo Samples Fail Indian Quality Test; Company Rejects Findings

Reuters
By Reuters
April 1, 2019Health
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Johnson & Johnson’s Baby Shampoo Samples Fail Indian Quality Test; Company Rejects Findings
Bottles of Johnson's baby powder and Johnson's baby shampoo are displayed in a store in N.Y.C., on Jan. 22, 2019. (Brendan McDermid/File Photo via Reuters)

NEW DELHI—Johnson & Johnson’s baby shampoo samples failed quality tests conducted by the northwestern Indian state of Rajasthan, according to a public notice from the state’s drugs watchdog, findings that were rejected by the U.S. drugmaker.

This comes just a few months after Indian authorities launched an investigation into J&J’s Baby Powder to see if it contains cancer-causing asbestos. J&J said in late February it had resumed production of baby talc after government tests found no asbestos in the product.

The Rajasthan Drugs Control Organisation’s notice dated March 5, said that the samples of J&J’s baby shampoo taken from two batches had failed the quality test as they contained “harmful ingredients.” It did not elaborate.

The Rajasthan Drug Controller today directed withdrawal of all existing stocks of Johnson and Johnson baby shampoo from the market, saying these were not of standard quality and contained harmful ingredients.

ARJ Media 发布于 2019年4月1日周一

A J&J spokeswoman said that the results it received from the watchdog indicated that formaldehyde had been discovered in the samples. Formaldehyde, used in making building materials, is a known carcinogen.

“We do not accept the interim results given to us, which mentioned samples to ‘contain harmful ingredients—identification positive for formaldehyde,'” she told Reuters.

NTD Photo
A Johnson & Johnson building is shown in Irvine, Calif., on Jan. on 24, 2017. (Reuters/Mike Blake)

“We unequivocally maintain that our products are safe and our assurance process is amongst the most rigorous in the world,” the J&J spokeswoman said, adding that the company has contested the interim test results of the government analysis that were based on “unknown and unspecified methods.”

The two batches of the baby shampoo tested are due to expire in September 2021 and were manufactured at the company’s plant in the northern state of Himachal Pradesh, according to the watchdog’s notice.

“We have confirmed to the Indian authorities that we do not add formaldehyde as an ingredient in our shampoo nor does Johnson’s baby shampoo contain any ingredient that can release formaldehyde over time,” the company spokeswoman said.

The Rajasthan Drugs Control Organisation and India’s Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO) were not immediately available to comment.

The federal regulator and its counterparts in Indian states launched an investigation into J&J’s Baby Powder following a Reuters report in December that the firm knew for decades that cancer-causing asbestos could be found in the product.

A container of Johnson's baby powder
A container of Johnson’s baby powder in San Fra., Calif., on July 13, 2018. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

J&J has described the Reuters article as “one-sided, false and inflammatory.”

J&J’s Baby Powder is one of the most recognised foreign brands in the country. The company leads sales in the Indian baby and child toiletries market, according to market research provider Euromonitor.

By Subrat Patnaik