Muzi.com News Gallery Library Forum Celebrity Movies Chinastar Regions Channels
Set Home|Subscribe|Premium Home|MyMuzi

Home | Headlines | Photos | Region | People | Time | Events | Business | Sports | Showbiz | IT | Politics | Military | Society | Education | Life | Health | Most-viewed Story | Most-viewed Coverage
  Muzi.com : Muzi (English) : News
  FTC fines weight loss pill firms $25M
Last updated: 2007-01-04


FTC fines weight loss pill firms $25M
2007-01-04

Category
Weight-Loss Pill
Company
Bayer AG
University
Boston University
Category
Osteoporosis
Now that you've indulged in all those holiday goodies and made that New Year's resolution to shed some pounds, the government says don't count on a diet pill to help.

The Federal Trade Commission said Thursday it was fining the marketers of four weight-loss drugs a collective $25 million for false advertising claims. Despite that, the pills -- Xenadrine EFX, CortiSlim, One-A-Day WeightSmart and TrimSpa -- will remain on store shelves.

"It is resolution time again, isn't it?" said FTC Chairman Deborah Platt Majoras. "We're implementing our resolution to fight back against companies that use deceptive advertising claims."

Some of the products marketed their claims through infomercials or celebrity endorsements. Anna Nicole Smith, for example, has endorsed TrimSpa.

"Testimonials from individuals are not a substitute for science," Majoras said. "And that's what Americans need to understand."

The FTC investigated a variety of claims, including rapid weight loss and reduction in the risk of osteoporosis, Alzheimer's and even cancer, Majoras noted.

The largest fine was levied against the marketer of Xenadrine EFX, made by New Jersey-based Nutraquest, Inc., formerly known as Cytodyne Technologies. The marketers will pay at least $8 million and as much as $12.8 million. The marketer was identified as RTC Research & Development, LLC, based in Manasquan, N.J.

Majoras said Xenadrine had a study showing that people who took a placebo lost more weight than those taking the pill. The FTC's investigation also found that consumer endorsers -- people who appear in the before-and-after pictures in many ads -- lost weight by engaging in rigorous diet and exercise programs.

A $12 million fine was assessed against Window Rock Health Laboratories, based in Brea, Calif., the marketers of CortiSlim. Majoras said CortiSlim falsely promised that all users would see permanent and fast weight loss, and that its TV infomercials were "deceptively formatted" to appear as talk shows rather than ads.

The Bayer Corp., based in Morristown, N.J., will pay a $3.2 million civil penalty to settle the claims. The FTC said Bayer marketed One-A-Day WeightSmart with unsubstantiated claims including that it increases metabolism. Bayer violated an earlier FTC order requiring all health claims for its One-A-Day brand vitamins be supported by competent and reliable scientific evidence.

The marketers of TrimSpa, Goen Technologies Corp., will pay $1.5 million. Both Goen and TrimSpa are based in Whippany, N.J. The FTC said Goen had inadequate scientific evidence to support claims that TrimSpa causes rapid and substantial weight loss.

Marketers for Xenadrine EFX and CortiSlim did not return telephone calls for comment.

Bayer disagreed with the FTC's description of the company as a marketer of a weight-loss pill.

"It's a multivitamin," said Tricia McKernan, spokeswoman for Bayer HealthCare's Consumer Care Division. "We don't market ourselves as a weight-loss product."

Rather than go through the expense of litigation, Bayer decided the way to "close this issue" was to settle, McKernan said.

TrimSpa released a statement saying the FTC's investigation of a handful of its ads was "amicably resolved" without the company's admission of any liability.

Some of the fines could be returned to consumers who purchased Xenadrine EFX and CortiSlim. The marketers of the other two drugs paid civil penalties.

Consumers who purchased Xenadrine EFX and CortiSlim directly from the marketers will be contacted by the FTC about getting their money back. People who bought the pills over the counter will have to wait a few months for the agency to put up a public notice on its Web site telling them how to recoup money.

Dr. Louis Aronne, director of the Comprehensive Weight Control Program at New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, said people turn to the pills because they promise results with no effort.

"They make it sound like you don't have to do anything but take the pill," Aronne said. He said Congress should regulate diet pills as medication, which would place much more stringent measures on manufacturers and marketers.

Joan Salge Blake, a professor of nutrition at Boston University, said dieters should do what they've heard before -- cut calories, eat healthier foods and exercise.

"If a pill sounds too good to be true, it probably is," she said.

____

On the Net:

Federal Trade Commission:

http://www.ftc.gov/opa/2007/01/weightloss.htm

 Osteoporosis   Weight-Loss Pill 
  Profile News105GalleryLinks  
  Sixth 'Taste' Discovered - Calcium (2008-08-20)
  Vitamin D helps colorectal cancer patients: study (2008-06-18)
  Raloxifene Cuts Risk of Certain Type of Breast Cancer (2008-06-11)
  Wal-Mart expands low-price drug program (2008-05-05)
  British team finds two genes for osteoporosis (2008-04-29)
  Vitamin D found to guard against artery disease (2008-04-16)
  Blood pressure drug reduces bone density in study (2008-04-14)
  Study links magnesium deficiency to faster aging (2008-04-09)
  Zoo beasts must battle the bulge, too (2008-03-17)
  Time to put that gorilla on a diet (2008-03-17)
  Men as well as women need bone tests (2008-02-25)
  Cancer treatment may also help osteoporosis (2008-01-26)
  Amgen profit up, 2008 outlook steady (2008-01-24)
  More sun is healthy, despite skin cancer risk, study says (2008-01-07)
  Doctors target germs' ability to cluster (2008-01-01)
  Wyeth to cut costs as Teva ships generic Protonix (2007-12-24)
  Merck sees higher 2008 earnings as new drugs shine (2007-12-04)
  Fosamax users seek class-action status (2007-12-01)
  Merck, Schering-Plough post profit jumps (2007-07-23)
  Study: With calcium, food trumps pills (2007-06-28)
  Wounded GI endures blindness, paralysis (2007-06-24)
  Panel rejects new weight-loss drug (2007-06-14)
  Fitness vibrations trendy, perhaps risky (2007-05-30)
  Vitamin D needs more calcium to lower hip fracture (2007-05-20)
  Nuns reunite to mark 1967 calcium study (2007-04-25)


Stories Coverages

NewsGuide EventCityPeopleShowCompany 
 ENTSportsBIZEDULifeMilitaryPoliticsSocietyHealth 


[2009 Tiger Woods Accident]: Woods' fall from grace rekindles role-model debate (10:25 12/4)


[Anti-terror War in Pakistan]: Suicide attackers kill 36 at Pakistan mosque (10:25 12/4)

[Afghan Terror War]: US Marines launch large offensive in Afghanistan (10:25 12/4)


[Vietnam War]: US Marines launch large offensive in Afghanistan (10:25 12/4)


[2008 U.S. Layoff Crisis]: Unexpected drop in jobless rate sparks optimism (10:25 12/4)


[Roman Polanski Rape Case]: Roman Polanski begins house arrest in Gstaad (10:25 12/4)


[2009 White House Party-crasher]: Lawmakers demand testimony by WH social secretary (10:25 12/4)


[2009 Fort Hood Shootings]: Fort Hood unit deploys despite losing soldiers (10:25 12/4)

[2008 U.S. Recession]: Why Rich Consumers Matter More (10:25 12/4)


[2009 US Health Reform]: Senate votes to keep Medicare cuts in health bill (19:41 12/3)



Muzi.com

Muzi.com : About | Sitemap | Ads | Contact
All Rights Reserved 1994-2006 - All rights reserved.