In addition, in May 1982 Nestlé formed the Nestlé Infant Formula Audit Commission (NIFAC), chaired by former Senator
Edmund J. Muskie, and asked the commission to review the company’s instructions to field personnel to determine if they could be improved to better implement the code. At the same time, Nestlé
continued its meetings with WHO and UNICEF (United Nations
Children’s Fund) to try to obtain the most accurate interpretation
of the code. NIFAC recommended several clarifications for the instructions that it believed would better interpret ambiguous areas
of the code; in October 1982, Nestlé accepted those recommendations and issued revised instructions to field personnel.
Other issues within the code, such as the question of a warning