Page 12-Saturday; August)11, 1979-The Michigan Daily LANSING (UPI)-Health officials yesterday urged P aren ts told parents not to use two baby formulas which were recalled due to an apparent manufacturing error, but said there have been no reported illnesses in Michigan associated with the products. not to use The formulas, Neo-mull-soy and CHO Free, were recalled by their California manufacturer, Syntex Laboratories, after they were found to have caused failure to gain weight, loss of eca appetite, lethargy, and constipation in some infants who took them. FEDERAL OFFICALS reports 31 cases nationwide, but there have been no deaths and infants taken off the formula have recovered. The formulas are made from soy beans and are given to 23sotht e Effect children believed to be allergic to milk. The state Department of Public Health urged parents who, have the products to return them to the store for a refund. STATE WOMEN and infant care programs have been notified to stop distributing the formulas and refer children who have taken them to physicians for tests, officials said. Marian Van Neirop, a nutrition consultant for the depar- tment, said the two products accounted for about 6 per cent to 10 per cent of the formula market. She said she could not estimate how many Michigan children received them. VAN NIEROP said Neo-mull-soy was used in the so-called WIC program-Special Supplemental Food Program for Women, Infants, and Children. of nuclear accident on pregnant women studied ANOTNER STATE COMPLEXPATRON CONVENIENCE YES! NOW YOU CAN PURCHASE TICKETS FOR FRI., SAT., MON., EVENING SHOWS WHEN YOU WANT TO AND NOT WHEN YOU HAVE TO. "MUPPET MOVIE" "MEA TBA LLS'" Advance Tickets Suggested Seats Available As Late As For Fri.-Sat.-Sun.-Mon. Eve Shows Showtime Excep-t Mon. Eve. "IN-L AWS "Concord A ir port '79" Seats Available As Lot As Seats Avoiloble As Late Show Time Exce t Mon. Eve. 2 - 'a t -n. Eve. "AL 0 eFRTCKTINOMAIN HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - Pregnant women living near the Three Mile Island nuclear plant will be studied over the next two years by scientists trying to learn how they are affected by low-level radiation - and by the fear of it. With the help of hospitals and death records, a nine-member state team will check on the outcome of an estimated 8,000 births by women living within 10 miles of the facility between last March 28 and March 27, 1981. MARCH 28 was the day that two valves malfunctioned in the nuclear plant's cooling system, resulting in a leak of radiation into the atmosphere. It was the worst accident in the U.S. civilian atomic program. On March 30, Gov. Dick Thornburgh advised pregnant women and pre- school children livingwithin a five-mile radius to leave. The advisory lasted 11 days for the two groups, whose body tissues are particularly susceptible to the effects of radiation. "In my first trimester, I couldn't sleep. I had nightmares ... and won- dered if I would have to take tranquilizers that could affect the fetus," said Dr. Joyce Kim, the project supervisor, who is six months pregnant. "EVERY DOSAGE of radiation is an overdose. Children and babies are four times more susceptible to radiation," Kim told reporters. "The susceptibility of the unborn is even higher." Dr. George Tokuhata, director of the state Bureau of Health Research, downplayed the possible physical effec- ts of the radiation on births. "THE AMOUNT of radiation that was monitored and reported was very small," he said. "We don't anticipate any great impact from the radiation. "But there was considerable psychological stress on pregnant women, and that may have caused some impact on their pregnancies," he added. Tokuhata said the team would check fetal deaths, congenital birth defects, premature babies, babies who die within 28 days of birth, and the con- dition of babies at birth. HE SAID THE two year period was selected to compare babies whose mothers were pregnant during the 10- day crisis period, and those whose mothers became pregnant afteward. The mothers will be asked dozens of questions, including whether they were emotionally disturbed by the accident, and whether that prompted them to take some type of drugs. All of the information will be analyzed by computer and will be kept confidential, according to the Health Department. "I THINK IT'S such a worthwhile program, not just to Pennsylvania, but as a great contribution to the whole world," Dr. Kim said. The U.S. Department of Health, Eud- cation, and Welfare is providing $80,000 for the study, "but the budget will be much larger than that," said William Sheppard, a state Health Department spokesman. He did not know how much more money would be needed. Wisconsin board proposes tests for elderly M.D.'s MADISON, Wis. (AP)-Wisconsin may become the first state in the nation to require elderly doctors to take com- petency tests, state officials say. Dr. William Baker, chairman of the state's Medical Examining Board, said written and oral tests may be required of physicians after a certain number of years, perhaps when the reach age 60, 65, or 70. Such testing, he said, "could be one possible way of making sure.. . that someone is not a menace." BAKER SAID the board will study the testing proposal at a meeting next Wednesday, and seek legal advice. Many states require doctors to take courses to keep abreast of medical developments, but board spokesmen say they know of no state which specifically asks them to take and pass tests in-order to retain their licenses to practice. Baker said the idea is not likely to be popular, at least in the profession itself, and that he has a "sneaky feeling that we would not be followed" by other states. THE 4,500 member State Medical Society, Wisconsin's largest physicians' organization, has taken no formal position on the proposed com- petency tests, spokesman William Wendle said yesterday. If the tests "would do what the people who advocate them want, the society probably would support them," he said. "It's a laudable thing to try to insure competency." However, he said earlier attempts at testing have shown it "doesn't work out to be the cure all we would like it to be." "UNFORTUNATELY, those who need it most find ways around it," Wendle said. Currently, Wisconsin doctors are required to have their licenses renewed every two years and show they have had 30 hours of continuing education during that period. "But the board thinks these are the people who probably need continuing education even more," shesaid. FOR GOD'S SAKE GET OUT JAMES BROLIN THE Mon.TUES.-THURS. FRI. A.I-XIL-LE 7:25-9:25IjR IIOVR SAT.-SUN.-WED. ALYD 1:253:25-5:25-7:25-925A"E M T I