Major Food and Drug Recalls in the U.S. — October 2025: What Consumers Need to Know

Every month, consumers trust that the products on supermarket shelves or in their medicine cabinets are safe to consume or use. But in October 2025, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) confirmed multiple recall notices covering both food items and medications, across everything from baby-food pouches to statin pills. Here’s what to know: what was recalled, why, and what you can do.

What Was Recalled & Why

1. Food & Beverages

Baby Food: Lead Concern

A voluntary recall was issued for certain pouches of Sprout Organics “Sweet Potato Apple & Spinach” (3.5-oz) sold at retailers such as Walgreens due to elevated lead levels.

Pet Treats: Salmonella Risk

Foodynamics announced a voluntary recall of specific lots of freeze-dried pet treats (brands like Raw Dog Barkery, BellePepper Cats, Kanu Pets, What’s In the Bowl) because of possible contamination with Salmonella infection.

Cinnamon, Pecans & Eggs: Multiple Alerts

 According to the FDA’s recall list, on October 17 2025, multiple food items were flagged: 

  • Ground cinnamon (lead contamination risk)
  • Cinnamon whiskey pecans (undeclared cashews, allergen risk)
  • Pasture-raised eggs (possible Salmonella)
  • Ice cream (eggs undeclared)
  • Frozen raw shrimp (exposure to very low levels of Cs-137).

2. Medications

Cholesterol Drug: Dissolution Failure

Over 140,000 bottles of generic Atorvastatin Calcium (a statin) were recalled because the tablets “failed dissolution specifications,” meaning they might not break down as intended and thus might not be effective.

Multiple Drugs: Label-mix and Manufacturing Errors

Another round of recall notices covered many prescription drugs including:

  • A label mix-up between brands of a muscle-relaxant and another product.
  • Generic versions of antiepileptic and antipsychotic drugs with manufacturing defects.

What You, the Consumer, Should Do

  • Identify and check the affected lot numbers, expiration dates, or product descriptions listed in the recall notices.
  • Take all recalls seriously. Products may seem harmless but may still pose a risk or cause very minor damage. For instance, ineffective medications, exposure to lead, or very low lead poisoning.
  • For medications, talk to your pharmacist or physician. Food items are self-returnable to retailers.
  • Keep up to date with the FDA’s searchable recall databases, including Drug Recalls and Recalls.
  • Incorporate safe practices, like washing your hands after handling pet food or items that are known to be contaminated. With young children, older adults, and chronically ill people, be prudent.
Editor Spl

Recent Posts

Why Alexander Volkanovski’s Sydney Defense is Being Billed as the UFC Event of the Year

The combat sports world has its eyes fixed on Sydney as Alexander Volkanovski prepares for a historic homecoming at UFC… Read More

January 24, 2026

How a Single Scene in Jujutsu Kaisen Broke the Internet

The anime landscape shifted dramatically with the release of Jujutsu Kaisen Season 2, specifically during the "Hidden Inventory" arc. While… Read More

January 24, 2026

How a New Federal Bill Could Decentralize US Tech Innovation Away from Major Cities

The United States technology landscape is on the brink of a historic shift, driven by the implementation of the FY… Read More

January 24, 2026

The Privacy Implications of TSA Expanding Biometrics to 45 More Airports

TSA announced January 14, 2026, expansion of PreCheck Touchless ID—facial recognition biometrics—from 15 to 65 U.S. airports by spring, adding… Read More

January 24, 2026

Why Europe’s Travel Giant TUI is Suddenly Pivoting Hard to Latin America and Jamaica

Europe's largest tour operator, TUI Group, is aggressively expanding into Latin America and Jamaica as announced at FITUR 2026 in… Read More

January 24, 2026

How Issey Miyake’s Paris Show Challenges Geometry of Modern Menswear

Formless Form is a collection of IM MEN Fall/Winter 2026 by Issey Miyake that was introduced January 22, 2026, in… Read More

January 24, 2026

This website uses cookies.

Read More