Sunday, January 16, 2011

Can You Believe It? J&J Announces Another Recall...

McNeil Consumer Healthcare Initiates Yet Another Voluntary Recall Of Certain Products.

Just when you thought it could not get much worse for J &J, on Friday Johnson & Johnson’s McNeil Consumer Healthcare Division, in consultation with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration recalled certain lots of TYLENOL® 8 Hour, TYLENOL® Arthritis Pain, and TYLENOL® upper respiratory products, and certain lots of BENADRYL®, SUDAFED PE®, and SINUTAB® products distributed in the United States, the Caribbean, and Brazil.

The J &J company statement said that the recalled products were manufactured at the McNeil plant in Fort Washington, Pennsylvania prior to April 2010, when production at the facility was suspended. The company is initiating the recall as a precautionary measure after an extensive review of past production records found instances where equipment cleaning procedures were insufficient or that cleaning was not adequately documented. It is very unlikely that this impacted the quality of these products.

In addition, McNeil Consumer Healthcare is also initiating a voluntary recall of certain product lots of ROLAIDS® Multi-Symptom Berry Tablets distributed in the United States, in order to update the labeling. The company initiated the recall after determining that the product labeling does not include the language “Does not meet USP” as required by regulation.

According to the press release, McNeil identified the inadequacies as part of a thorough, proactive product quality and process assessment of all McNeil produced products.

On all levels this is a saga of an industry giant that has poorly managed the entire process of production, product quality control, regulatory affairs and public relations. J&J’s entire corporate image, trusted brands, executive management and financial future is in a significant state of decline.

J&J’s announcement of a comprehensive plan to clean up its production and public image is a operational and PR process that should have been initiated many months ago.


The lost sales, enormous expense in recalls and cost to the brands has to be a huge hit to J&J's bottom line.

This story is a cautionary tale for all, not making an investment in and failure to take the necessary steps to assure quality control and to protect your brand from sub-standard production, poor quality raw materials, fraud, adulteration and counterfeit will cost the stakeholders and consumer.

What are the odds that we will see another recall from J&J soon?

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