Latest News:  

English>>China Society

Parents squirm after spotting worms in diapers

(Shanghai Daily)

14:30, July 24, 2013

Kunberly-clark, an American personal care products company, has offered to refund or exchange a new set of diapers after a local consumer complained about worms in Huggies diapers which were purchased online.

The Shanghai Morning Post reported yesterday that a man, surnamed Peng, called the company's hotline to complain that a pack of infant diapers he bought online were infected with worms.

Peng said he bought two packs of Huggies diapers, each of them containing 72 pieces, in March before the birth of his child.

When his wife changed the infant's diapers recently, she spotted the worms, Peng said.

"We were shocked to see worms squirming from the baby's hip," he told the paper.

Peng said he found more such worms in the package.

"It is disgusting," his wife told the newspaper reporters who visited their place and saw first-hand the worms in the packet.

The expiry period of the diapers is three years.

Kimberly-Clark told Shanghai Daily yesterday that it had talked to Peng and offered a refund or exchange the diapers, but he did not accept the offer.

Cai Min, a PR official at Kimberly-Clark China, said the company hoped that Peng would hand over a sample of the diaper to determine if the worms were present during packaging.

The company said it would contact Peng again today.

We Recommend:

San Francisco crash survivors come back home

China’s weekly story (2013.7.5-7.12)

A glimpse of residents' daily life in Sansha

Photos:The world's oldest woman

Students' survival challenge in a strange city

Fuzhou tops the list of hottest cities in China

Sea foods, a luxury bite in summer

College student car models show youthful vigor

Nightlife at Foxconn Zhengzhou park

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:GaoYinan、Chen Lidan)

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. Special operation members in contest

  2. Members of PLA special forces

  3. New prince makes first appearance

  4. Bird's Nest adds new attraction

  5. 196 villagers' death-defying getaway

  6. Blast rips through bakery in Beijing

  7. 29 gorgeous castles from around the world

  8. Press of 'Crimes of Passion'

  9. Huawei H1 sales revenue up 10.8 pct

  10. EU regulation enhances toy safety

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Multinationals' dependence on China grows
  2. Skipping breakfast may increase heart disease risk
  3. Economic restructuring helps China's growth
  4. New thinking needed for Korean crisis
  5. Jobless rate to be 'last straw' for policy direction
  6. Abe should focus more on Japan's economy
  7. Are 'dark fairy tales' appropriate for children?
  8. Xi Murong: Poets and poetry never die
  9. Chinese brands should ‘be bold’
  10. Yuan rises 34% against USD, what next?

What’s happening in China

People hold funeral for deceased relatives in quake-hit region

  1. Littering from car window to be punished in Beijing
  2. Unions should help workers get allowances
  3. Poultry markets closed for H7N9 case in Langfang
  4. NW China downpours kill 11
  5. Traffic accident kills 16 in E China