Attention, parents: DIY formulas aren’t the answer to the formula shortage.
A nationwide shortage has left Australian parents desperate to get their hands on tins of baby formula.
Supermarket shelves in Sydney are bare. Tins of organic formula are selling for $180+ online. Customers are launching online petitions calling for a stricter per-person limit on purchase of the product.
But if you’re tempted to try to brew your own formula amid the shortage crisis, experts have a clear message for you: don’t do it.
Products like celebrity chef Pete Evan’s homemade paleo baby formula may seem like tempting alternatives to the store-bought products, but dietitians say the dosage of Vitamin A in the celebrity chef’s recipe is unsafe.
Dietitian Sheridan Collins has now also claimed that feeding a baby homemade formula could damage the child’s kidneys, liver and brain.
“It’s very specifically designed to be as close to breast milk as possible so it’s a very fine formulation of micro nutrients and macro nutrients to get the perfect balance to be sufficient for growth and development for the infant,” she told The Daily Telegraph.
“If they’re not in the right quantities they could be dangerous and have an impact on the baby’s gut or on their kidneys and other aspects of their development.”
She added that the baby could also suffer vomiting or bleeding from the gut, and that his or her brain development could be hampered.
So what’s a safe solution to the formula shortage?
If your first choice of formula is sold out at the supermarket, Collins told The Daily Telegraph parents should try another brand.