Thursday, January 28, 2010

Mead Johnson, erstwhile Bristol Myers Squibb division

Nestle is still in baby powders, so is Heinz(infant nutrition), Mead Johnson IPO and independence from BMS(BMY) here

Mead Johnson Has the Wrong Formula for Marketing: Sued Again for False Advertising




PBM Products, LLC, which makes infant formula for big box stores like Kroger, WalMart, Sam’s Club, and Target, sued Mead Johnson, claiming the Enfamil maker made false statements regarding its ENFAMIL baby formula.

Mead Johnson’s new direct mail campaign states ”Enfamil LIPIL’s unique formulation is not available in any store brand.” Worse, the suit claims, defendants display a picture of a blurry rubber ducky, implying that customers who give their babies anything other than Enfamil may endanger their child’s vision and brain development. In fact, PBM claims its product is identical to the defendant’s product, according to the lawsuit, which can be downloaded here.

Mead Johnson has been entangled with PBM in the past (and lost), both in litigation, and through challenges at the National Advertising Division (“NAD”). Mead Johnson has also been before the FTC after failing to comply with the NAD decision. Paul Manning, PBM’s CEO, claims that Mead Johnson has twice before made similar false claims, and in both instances, the court banned the company from making more false advertising claims about its products and forced Mead Johnson to make corrections to its advertising.

This lawsuit seems to be ruffling feathers throughout the regulatory world. NAD, the self-regulatory agency which works with advertisers to correct advertising problems without litigation, made a stmt cutting itself slack

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