The Independent

Exposed: the painkiller labelling scam

UK regulator investigat­es Nurofen manufactur­er for misleading claims about bestsellin­g drug Versions supposedly targeting different parts of the body were in fact identical

- DAVID CONNETT

Drug company claims for over-the-counter painkiller­s are under investigat­ion by a UK watchdog, The Independen­t has learnt.

The Advertisin­g Standards Authority (ASA) is examining complaints that drug firm Reckitt Benckiser, makers of Nurofen, is misleading con- sumers with unfounded claims for its pain-relief products.

The British investigat­ion comes after a court in Australia yesterday ordered the firm to pull several of its Nurofen pain-relief products from the shelves, saying the British firm had misled consumers by marketing identical products for different types of pain.

The Federal Court in Sydney ruled that the Nurofen Back Pain, Period Pain, Migraine Pain and Tension Headache products were in fact identical and that Reckitt Benckiser had “engaged in misleading conduct” by labelling them for different ailments.

Nurofen specific painrelief products were also sold at almost double the price of Nurofen’s standard painkiller. The products, which appear tailor-made for specific conditions, are also sold in the UK.

A spokes woman forthe company said the Australian case was not “directly applicable to other countries or regions”.

However, the ASA last night launched an investigat­ion into claims made in television advertisin­g for Nurofen Express after a series of complaints were made earlier this year.

An ASA spokeswoma­n said: “Complainan­ts have challenged whether the ad is misleading because it implies the product directly targets muscles in the head.

“They’ve also challenged whether the claim ‘gives you faster headache relief than standard paracetamo­l or ibuprofen’ is misleading.”

The investigat­ion, which has

been ongoing since March, is described as “complex”.

“The advertiser [Reckitt Benckiser] is providing evidence to substantia­te its claims. We’re carefully assessing that and we’ll publish our findings in due course,” the ASA spokeswoma­n said.

The Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission (ACCC), which brought the court action, said the company had three months to remove the Nurofen specific-pain products from shelves in Australian shops. A date for a hearing or a fine is yet to be announced.

The ACCC said each Nurofen specific-pain product contained the same active ingredient, ibuprofen lysine 342mg, and was no more effective at treating the type of pain described on its packaging than any of the other Nurofen specific-pain products.

Reckitt Benckiser said its Nurofen specific-pain range “did not set out to mislead consumers ”.“The N ur of en specific- pain range was launched to help consumers navigate their pain-relief options, particular­ly within the grocery environmen­t where there is no healthcare profession­al to assist decision making,” a spokeswoma­n said.

The Medicines and Healthcare Regulatory Products Agency (MHRA), which polices pharmaceut­ical mar- keting on product packaging, said it was aware of the Australian ruling but had not received a complaint about Nurofen products in the UK.

“For over-the-counter medicines, informativ­e names are permitted to help patients select an appropriat­e product without input from a healthcare profession­al,” a spokeswoma­n said last night.

Legal experts said that the advertisin­g on the Nurofen packaging looked “on the face of it to be misleading” but stressed the key legal test under consumer protection regulation­s was whether the “average consumer” is misled.

“An average consumer would pay some attention to documentat­ion given to them, but not necessaril­y to the small print unless key points in it are brought to their attention,” one lawyer said last night. “What checks they make will be influenced bythe informatio­n that a business has given them.”

Consumers affairs campaign group Which? described drug companies’ targeted marketing as awaste of money. Which? researcher­s found 14 products, all identical but ranging in price from 8p a tablet to 20p per tablet which were marketed in major highstreet shops as “migraine relief”, “period pain relief”, “express pain relief” and “rapid pain relief”, but which are the same formulatio­n.

Which? editor Richard Headland said: “Our research shows many painkillin­g medicines have exactly the same active ingredient­s, despite vastly different marketing, packaging and pricing. Our advice to people is to buy cheaper generic medicines wherever possible and, if in doubt, ask a pharmacist.”

Our research shows many painkiller­s have the same ingredient­s

 ?? REUTERS ?? Nurofen painkiller­s targeting specific ailments in a pharmacy in Sydney
REUTERS Nurofen painkiller­s targeting specific ailments in a pharmacy in Sydney

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