Morinaga Milk arsenic poisoning incident information
1955 food safety incident in Japan
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The Morinaga Milk arsenic poisoning incident occurred in 1955 in Japan and is believed to have resulted in the deaths of over 100 infants.[1] The incident occurred when arsenic was inadvertently added to dried milk via the use of an industrial grade monosodium phosphate additive.[2] This incident also led to negative health effects for thousands of other infants and individuals, which has had lingering health effects.[2][3]
^Dakeishi M, Murata K, Grandjean P (October 2006). "Long-term consequences of arsenic poisoning during infancy due to contaminated milk powder". Environmental Health. 5: 31. doi:10.1186/1476-069X-5-31. PMC 1635412. PMID 17076881.
^ ab"VI. Establishment of the Hikari foundation". archive.unu.edu. Retrieved 17 May 2017.
^Yorifuji T, Tsuda T, Doi H, Grandjean P (May 2011). "Cancer excess after arsenic exposure from contaminated milk powder". Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine. 16 (3): 164–70. doi:10.1007/s12199-010-0182-x. PMC 3078290. PMID 21431798.
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