Health & Fitness

CVS, Target Latest Georgia Stores Limiting Baby Formula Purchases

Walgreens, CVS and Target stores in Georgia are all limiting purchases to three units of infant and toddler formula amid a shortage.

GEORGIA — Georgia parents who rely on formula to feed their babies may be limited to how much they can buy the next time they head to the store.

National retailers CVS and Target have joined Walgreens in putting limits on how much baby formula customers can buy per visit to stores in Georgia and other states.

Both companies told the Wall Street Journal that customers can only purchase three infant and toddler formula products per visit in-store or online.

Find out what's happening in Atlantafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Patch reached out to Florida-based Publix to see if the grocery store chain has plans to limit baby formula purchases. So far, the company has yet to comment.

Supply chain issues and baby formula recalls are among the factors contributing to a nationwide shortage.

Find out what's happening in Atlantafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Walgreens told Patch it was also enforcing the policy at all of its more than 9,000 locations across the United States. The Illinois-based company has more than 250 pharmacies in Georgia.

"Due to increased demand and various supplier challenges, infant and toddler formulas are seeing constraint across the country," a Walgreens spokesperson told Patch. "Similar to other retailers, we put into effect purchase limits of three per transaction on all infant and toddler formula to help improve inventory. We continue to work diligently with our supplier partners to best meet customer demands."

CVS currently has 346 locations in Georgia, while the state has around 50 Target stores.

A Walmart representative told WSJ the company already has a five-per-day product purchase limit on baby formula in most states.

Patch also reached out to Florida-based Publix to see if the grocery store chain has plans to limit baby formula purchases. As of publication time, the company has yet to comment.

In February, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced an investigation into consumer complaints of Cronobacter sakazakii and salmonella newport infections following a number of reported cases.

Among the cases, two infants died of illnesses from Cronobacter sakazakii, a rare and dangerous germ that is particularly deadly to infants. All the cases are reported to come from consumed powdered infant formula produced from Abbott Nutrition's Sturgis, Michigan, facility.

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