In January 2026, over 50 countries and market jurisdictions ultimately issued recalls or public warnings regarding Nestlé infant formula contaminated with cereulide, a heat-stable bacterial toxin. Yet Georgia’s National Food Agency moved independently on January 8th—before the nation even appeared on Nestlé’s official advisory list. This critical gap between corporate communication timelines and regulatory response capacity underscores a persistent vulnerability in global food safety systems: information asymmetry between multinational manufacturers and smaller-market regulators. Georgia’s decision to synthesize available international data and issue precautionary guidance without waiting for official corporate confirmation protected vulnerable infant populations within hours. The incident demonstrates that speed in responding to contamination crises directly correlates with protection of at-risk populations, particularly infants whose physiological vulnerability demands the fastest possible intervention. Read the full article on GMJ Newsroom.
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