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Keyword: phenylephrine

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  • Orwell Meets Your Stuffy Nose

    09/17/2023 10:35:38 AM PDT · by lightman · 29 replies
    epoch times ^ | 17 September A.D. 2023 | Jeffrey Tucker
    Commentary “Experts have long doubted the effectiveness of phenylephrine,” which is a common ingredient in DayQuil, NyQuil, Sudafed, Mucinex, and others. This was National Public Radio on Wednesday morning, Sept. 13. It reminds me of Orwell: Oceania has always been at war with Eastasia. They are telling us this 16 years after the FDA forced the ingredient as the substitute for a product that actually works, which is pseudoephedrine. To get the product with pseudoephedrine requires that you ask for it. It is kept behind the counter. Then you have to use your drivers’ license and there are restrictions on...
  • FDA rules TODAY that ingredient in Benadryl and Sudafed from pharmacy shelves don't work

    09/12/2023 10:15:56 AM PDT · by Dahoser · 111 replies
    Daily Mail ^ | September 12, 2023 | Cassidy Morrison
    A Food and Drug Administration panel today unanimously ruled that a medicine used by millions for a stuffy nose does not work. Phenylephrine is the most common active compound in over-the-counter drugs like Benadryl Allergy Plus Congestion, Sudafed PE, and Tylenol Cold and Flu Severe Day & Night. But an FDA panel said after a two-day review that the oral decongestant ‘is not effective’ at standard or even high doses. Their ruling is not binding but it strongly suggests that the agency could soon heed their advice and pull its approval, which would force companies to pull or reformulate their...
  • Cold medicine makers getting creative

    10/07/2005 10:46:59 PM PDT · by neverdem · 16 replies · 916+ views
    The Seattle Times ^ | October 7, 2005 | CARLA K. JOHNSON
    Associated Press CHICAGO — Pocket-size throat sprays. Thin strips that melt in your mouth. Freezer pops. Like Mary Poppins with her spoonful of sugar, the makers of cold remedies are offering creative ways to help the medicine go down. The active ingredients aren't new, but the method for taking the medicine is. Growth in the over-the-counter cough and cold category is driven by new products, so tinkering with how people swallow the same old decongestants, cough suppressants and antihistamines is one way to appeal to shoppers. And for cold sufferers, a new twist on an old product offers a psychological...