When Nestlé initiated a global infant formula recall in January 2026 over potential bacterial contamination, Georgia’s National Food Agency demonstrated that smaller nations can outpace larger counterparts through strategic infrastructure investment and evidence-based decision-making. Despite not initially appearing on Nestlé’s official advisory list, Georgia’s regulators synthesized available international data and issued independent protective guidance on January 8th—the same day global media coverage accelerated. This case study reveals how modern digital health platforms, coordinated institutional networks, and rapid risk communication protocols can compress response timelines from days to hours. The Georgian model emphasizes that multinational corporate information channels are not always primary; instead, integrated public health systems that independently monitor international safety signals and maintain direct communication pathways with healthcare providers and families prove most effective. Read the full article on GMJ Newsroom.
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