Reckitt Benckiser misled consumers on Nurofen painkillers

SYDNEY – An Australian court yesterday ordered Reckitt Benckiserto to pull several of its Nurofen pain relief products from the market, saying the British firm had misled consumers by marketing identical products for different types of pain.

The Federal Court 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.

“We have known for years that they are all the same,” a pharmacist at Priceline Pharmacy’s Sydney city store told Reuters. “We have been advising our customers to go for the standard painkiller, which is cheaper.’

Nurofen specific pain relief products were sold at almost double the price of Nurofen’s standard painkiller, according to three pharmacies in Sydney.

Australia appears to be the first country to move against Nurofen specific pain relief products, which are also sold in New Zealand and the United Kingdom, according to pharmacy and supermarket websites in both countries.

Nurofen spokeswoman Montse Pena declined to answer questions about which countries outside Australia sold the specific pain relief versions of Nurofen. She said Australia’s actions were not ‘directly applicable to other countries or regions.’

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC), which brought the court action, said yesterday that Reckitt Benckiser had three months to remove the Nurofen specific pain products from Australian shelves.


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