Two suppliers provided dried milk powder that could be a culprit in the outbreak of botulism tied to ByHeart infant formula that has sickened dozens of babies, The Associated Press has learned.
Organic whole milk powder that tested positive for the type of bacteria that causes botulism was made from milk provided by Organic West Milk Inc., a California company, and processed at a Dairy Farmers of America plant in Fallon, Nevada, company officials said.
The source of the contamination, however, is not yet known. Both companies and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration emphasized that the investigation into the unprecedented outbreak that has sickened 51 babies in 19 states is ongoing.
Bill Van Ryn, an owner of Organic West Milk, said he learned last week that a sample of his company's milk powder collected by the FDA had tested positive for the germ that causes botulism.
But that doesn't mean his product is the source of the outbreak, Van Ryn stressed.
''Nothing has been proven about our milk yet,'' he said, adding: ''Something happened in the process of converting the milk to powder and then in converting it to baby formula.''
Organic West, which supplies milk from 55 farmers, didn't sell organic whole milk powder to any infant formula maker besides ByHeart, Van Ryn said. The milk company has halted sales of the powder used in any product intended for babies and children until more is known about the source of the outbreak, he added.
Powdered milk is made by pasteurizing liquid milk, concentrating it through evaporation and spraying it into a hot chamber, which causes the water to evaporate and leave behind fine, dry milk particles.