Jaehnert and his wife, Emily, said they have been fortunate to receive donations of NeoSure after getting their story out but urged others to donate cans of formula to food banks to help meet the urgent demand across the country.
Coyle said three babies were hospitalized due to intolerance of formulas parents used because of the shortages; another was sickened by mineral imbalances from caregivers mixing their own formula.
The toddler, who had been in the hospital for about a week, was discharged Tuesday. The preschooler, who was admitted in April, remains in the hospital, according to the hospital.
The baby formula shortage is affecting parents coast to coast, including those who choose not to or cannot breastfeed and those whose medically fragile children can’t tolerate other nutrition sources.
Beyond scouring the internet, parents like the Jaehnerts tirelessly search store shelves daily. Others coordinate formula exchanges through Facebook pages and spend countless hours — and sometimes huge sums of money — to make sure their children have food.
MacKenzie Jaehnert was born three months early in December and weighed 2 pounds, 5.7 ounces, her father said on Twitter. She spent more than 100 days in the neonatal intensive care unit. Jaehnert said Saturday he and his wife are “terrified” at the prospect of transitioning “a kid who is just barely hanging on” to a new nutritional formula.
“I fear that she’ll fall off of her growth chart more than she already is,” Emily Jaehnert said of MacKenzie. “I fear that she will have an upset stomach, that it won’t sit well with her, that she won’t get the nutrition that she needs, that this particular formula right now is providing for her.”
Officials in Washington are now confronting criticism that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration moved too slowly to address warning signs of the shortage. At the same time, they’re attempting to learn whether formula companies are actually short on ingredients, while also trying to tackle potential price gouging.
The closure exacerbated shortages caused by supply chain disruptions and highlighted how concentrated the formula industry is.
“I would really love for someone to figure out why we weren’t warned as the parents of premature kids,” Mac Jaehnert said Saturday. “This absolutely blindsided us… When did they know and why weren’t we warned of this shortage, because it put a lot of families in a really devastating position.”
CNN’s Edward-Isaac Dovere and Kaitlan Collins contributed to this report.