I usually try to cut drug companies a break. After doing research for one of them for my first career and seeing some of the amazing therapies that have come from industry research, I know first-hand about the lifesaving drugs that have come from drug companies. For this, they deserve much credit.
But when they try to fool people into buying their products – usually OTC – they need to be called out, something I've done dozens of times. Let's add one to that number, courtesy of a company called Haleon, a spinoff of a joint venture of Pfizer and GSK. The company's marketing campaign for Advil Targeted Relief Pain Relieving Cream (Up to 8 Hours of Powerful Relief of Minor Arthritis Pain, Joint Pain, Lower Back Pain, and Muscle Pain) is seriously sleazy and intentionally (IMO) misleading. Why? Because there is NO ADVIL in Advil Targeted Relief Pain Relieving Cream.
Wilbur, a long-time arthritis sufferer, is astounded to discover that there is no Advil in Advil. Note that the disclaimer of this mildly confusing factoid (red arrow) written in the Arial 0.1 font: DOES NOT CONTAIN THE SAME ACTIVE INGREDIENT AS ADVIL. Maybe Superman can read it. Or not. Image credits: Deviant Art, Flickr
What is Advil?
This should be straightforward, but Haleon trashed that idea. Advil is the brand name of the widely used antiinflammatory/analgesia drug ibuprofen, which was discovered in the 1960s and approved in the US in 1974. In 1984, it was first marketed as Advil by Whitehall-Robins Healthcare, now part of Haleon. That name sure seems to come up pretty often. More on this later.
What is in Advil Creme?
Let's start with the easy part: No Advil, no ibuprofen. Instead, it's a mixture of four common substances:
- Menthol (cough drops, itching remedy, Vicks VapoRub)
- Methyl salicylate (oil of wintergreen, artificial flavor, topical pain reliever)
- Capsaicin (Cayenne Pepper, pepper spray)
- Camphor (formerly in mothballs, cough drops, urinal cakes)