Los Angeles Times

J&J sued by Black women over baby powder, cancer

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Johnson & Johnson was sued on allegation­s of marketing baby powder to Black women even though it knew the product could cause ovarian cancer.

The National Council of Negro Women filed the lawsuit Tuesday against the world’s largest maker of healthcare products for going after Black women through “deceptive marketing” that included handing out free samples of its talc-based powders at beauty parlors and running advertisin­g campaigns.

“Internal documents demonstrat­e J&J targeted those advertisem­ents to Black women, knowing that Black women were more likely to use the powder products and to use them regularly,” according to the complaint, which seeks a finding of liability, warnings and a medical monitoring program funded by the company. “We now know what J&J knew long before it pulled its talc-based products from the market — that J&J’s powder products can cause ovarian cancer.”

Women across the country have said J&J’s talcbased powders caused their cancers, and the company faces more than 25,000 lawsuits over its products. It pulled its baby powder from U.S. and Canadian markets last year, and this year set aside $4 billion to deal with talc verdicts and settlement­s.

The allegation­s that Johnson & Johnson targeted communitie­s of color aren’t new. Internal documents surfaced earlier in the litigation, which has spanned more than seven years, showing the company’s marketing plans for Black and Latino women.

“The accusation­s being made against our company are false, and the idea that we would purposeful­ly and systematic­ally target a community with bad intentions is unreasonab­le and absurd,” J&J spokeswoma­n Kim Montagnino said in a statement.

Lawyers for the Black women’s group, which filed its suit in state court in New Jersey, said some of its members have developed cancer they link to daily use of baby powder and want to hold J&J accountabl­e. They point to a 1992 company memo recommendi­ng J&J look into “ethnic (African-American, Hispanic) opportunit­ies” to expand the baby powder franchise.

More than a decade later, J&J set up a task force devoted to improving sales of Shower to Shower, which featured a mixture of talc and cornstarch. J&J sold that product to Valeant Pharmaceut­icals in 2012.

“African American consumers in particular will be a good target with more of an emotional feeling and talk about reunions among friends, etc., team up with Ebony Magazine,” a 2002 memo from the task force concluded.

The task force suggested setting up promotions in churches, beauty salons and barbershop­s and hiring a recording star like Patti LaBelle or Aretha Franklin as a celebrity endorser. Neither became a spokeswoma­n for the brand.

The women’s group is asking a judge to hold J&J liable for misleading talc marketing and force it to warn Black women they may be “at higher risk of developing ovarian cancer in the future” through the use of talcbased powders over the years. The group also wants the company to pay for a medical monitoring program focused on ovarian cancer in communitie­s of color.

 ?? Justin Sullivan Getty Images ?? JOHNSON & JOHNSON targeted its talc-based powders to Black women knowing the product could cause ovarian cancer, a lawsuit filed Tuesday alleges.
Justin Sullivan Getty Images JOHNSON & JOHNSON targeted its talc-based powders to Black women knowing the product could cause ovarian cancer, a lawsuit filed Tuesday alleges.

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