Skip to content

FDA Bans 65 Chinese Mask Makers for Failing to Meet Filtration Standards

  • Asia

Republicans Introduce Bill to Rename Street Outside Chinese Embassy in Honor of Whistle-Blower Doctor

A few Republicans Representatives have introduced legislation to rename the street outside of the Chinese Embassy in Washington in honor of the Wuhan doctor who died after trying to warn the world about the CCP virus, commonly known as the novel coronavirus. Congresswoman Liz Cheney introduced a bill in the House this week to rename the street “Li Wenliang Plaza” and was joined by 14 of her Republican House Colleagues. GOP Sens. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), Ben Sasse (R-Neb.), Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), and Marsha Blackburn (R-Tn.), introduced a twin bill in the Senate to support the change. “The Chinese Government attempted to silence Dr. Li Wenliang who, at great personal risk, warned about the danger of coronavirus,” the Wyoming lawmaker said in a statement. Li has been lauded as a brave whistleblower by…

FDA Bans 65 Chinese Mask Makers for Failing to Meet Filtration Standards

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has revoked approval for more than 60 N95-type mask manufacturers in China to export to the United States, after testing found that many of their products did not meet quality standards.

The agency on May 7 cut the number of authorized manufacturers in China to 14 from around 80. Previously, on April 3, it had authorized the import of China-made masks that hadn’t been tested to counter shortages in personal protective equipment. One condition of that policy, however, was that the masks be tested by independent labs. Millions of masks had been imported since then.

Testing by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) under the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that many of the masks did not meet the filtration standard鈥攖hat is, they should filter out 95 percent of particles that are 0.3 microns or larger, according to the FDA.

Certain masks from China “may not provide consistent and adequate respiratory protection to health care personnel exposed to COVID-19,” the FDA said in a Thursday letter to healthcare providers.

The agency said it is also increasing checks on masks imported from China and will subject shipments to random testing, Bloomberg reported.

Earlier this month, the Wall Street Journal reported that NIOSH tested 67 types of imported N95- and KN95-style masks and found that 60 percent did not block out 95 percent of particles. In one case, a mask marked as KN95鈥攁 Chinese standard similar to N95鈥攂locked out less than 15 percent of particles. Another brand, which was packaged with an FDA authorized logo, filtered out only 35 percent of particles, the report said.

The decision comes amid rising backlash over shoddy Chinese-manufactured medical equipment聽during the pandemic. A growing list of countries, from Finland to the Netherlands, have recalled or sent back faulty masks, test kits, and protective suits.

In April, Missouri recalled thousands of KN95 masks from China that had been distributed to first responders, after testing found that that they did not meet standards.

Federal authorities are also working to stem the influx of counterfeit masks, with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement teaming up with American firms including 3M, Amazon, and Pfizer to identify low-quality medical gear entering into the country, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Focus News: FDA Bans 65 Chinese Mask Makers for Failing to Meet Filtration Standards

Volunteers Put Faces to Names of Americans in WWII Cemetery

OPIJNEN, Netherlands—Staff Sgt. Maurice Gosney was just a name carved on a white cross until a young Dutch historian went in search of the fallen American soldier’s face. Killed in an ambush near the German village of Sulzfeld on April 11, 1945, Gosney is one of more than 10,000 American servicemen and women buried or memorialized at the Netherlands American Cemetery in the southern Netherlands town of Margraten. A Dutch-based band of volunteers is now on a mission to put faces to all those names. It’s a way of bringing history alive and of expressing their enduring gratitude to the Allied forces that liberated the Netherlands from five years of brutal Nazi occupation. Historian Sebastiaan Vonk’s Faces of Margraten project, founded six years ago, already has uncovered photos of some…