
Children’s Dimetapp, DayQuil, Mucinex, Mucinex Children’s, and Sudafed
Allegations: Falsely marketing that phenylephrine products treat nasal congestion
Valdes et al. v. McNeil Consumer Healthcare et al.
23-cv-23939, S.D. Fla.
(Oct. 2023)
Tylenol, Theraflu, NyQuil, and DayQuil
Falsely marketing that phenylephrine products treat nasal congestion when phenylephrine is not an effective decongestant when taken orally
Pending
Allegations: Falsely marketing that phenylephrine products treat nasal congestion
Allegations: Falsely marketing that medicines treat nasal congestion
Allegations: Falsely marketing that medicines are decongestants
Allegations: Falsely marketing the products treat nasal congestion
Allegations: Falsely marketing that phenylephrine products treat congestion and other cold and flu symptoms
Allegations: Falsely marketing that medicines treat nasal congestion
Allegations: Falsely marketing that medicines treat nasal congestion
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing drink mixes using the phrase “Natural fruit flavor” and images of raspberries when they contain artificial flavoring ingredients
Allegations: Misleadingly marketing products as if they treat symptoms of coughs and colds
Allegations: False natural claims
Allegations: False natural claims
The bottom line? Toothpaste tubes aren’t generally getting recycled.
See how you stack up.
TINA.org has tracked more than 150 lawsuits alleging greenwashing.
An FDA panel’s recent findings has led to a flood of lawsuits.
Why is Secret making a big deal out of something that is true of all deodorants?