Banned additives in child medicines

Additives banned from food for children under three can be found in a range of medicines for babies and toddlers, a study said…

Additives banned from food for children under three can be found in a range of medicines for babies and toddlers, a study said today.

The Food Commission in Britain surveyed 41 medicines aimed at under-threes and found only one, Superdrug's Children's Dry Cough Syrup, that did not contain colourings or preservatives.

Two medicines, Morrisons Junior Paracetemol and Superdrug Junior Paracetemol Suspension, contained four different sweeteners.

The study, published in the Commission's Food Magazine, said some of the medicines warned the additives could cause side effects such as irritation of skin and eyes, stomach upset and diarrhoea.

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No colours or sweeteners are allowed in foods and drinks for children under three, and most preservatives are banned, the magazine said.

But it said the children's medicines surveyed contained a "cocktail of additives".

Four contained sythetic azo dyes, although only one of the medicines warned that the colouring could cause "allergic reactions, including asthma".