Hong Kong health authorities have reported a one-year-old girl who may have suffered food poisoning from Nestlé infant milk formula. The Centre for Health Protection said the toddler had diarrhoea up to five times a day after consuming Nestlé Nan INFINIPRO2 7HMO formula on December 30. Officials suspect cereulide toxin from Bacillus cereus bacteria in the milk formula. The girl recovered after switching to another product and did not need hospitalisation. The Centre for Food Safety ordered an immediate recall of 390 cans of Aptamil Profutura DUO Advance 1 (800g) milk formula imported from Germany. The batch has a use-by date of April 21, 2027. This recall adds to previous actions against 23 batches of powdered infant formula, involving Nestlé Nan, Wyeth Nutrition, and Aptamil brands. By February, the Department of Health received about 50 reports of children falling ill and 159 related inquiries. Ten samples from recalled Nestlé batches tested positive for the cereulide toxin. Dr Edwin Tsui Lok-kin, centre controller, said, "Given the girl’s persistent symptoms after consuming the powdered formula concerned, and the compatibility of the timing and symptoms with cereulide poisoning, we cannot rule out the possibility that she developed cereulide poisoning from consuming the above-mentioned powdered infant and young children formula." Authorities have alerted doctors across Hong Kong to watch for suspected cereulide poisoning cases. Parents are advised to seek medical care if their children feel unwell after drinking powdered infant formula. The scare follows warnings from European authorities about contaminated milk formula and has kept local regulators on high alert with six notification updates since early January.