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They said Colgate’s packaging, featuring ?bright colors and flavors such as Bubble Fruit and Silly Strawberry, made it ?seem safe for young children to use rinses, and to use as much toothpaste as ?older children and adults. Fluoride can be harmful if swallowed.
U.S. District Judge Andrea Wood in Chicago said reasonable consumers might not know where to draw the line for rinses, given how most Colgate labels ?prominently featured the words “kids” or “children’s.”
She said she was unpersuaded by Colgate’s insistence that consumers ?would know rinses are over-the-counter drugs and check the back labels, which contain required U.S. Food and ?Drug ?Administration warnings for young children.
Toothpaste was different, the judge said, because the labels expressly instructed that children between 2 and 6 use pea-sized amounts.
“Viewed in context, the toothbrush with a full strip of toothpaste is there only to represent the act of toothbrushing,” ?Wood wrote.
Colgate, based in ?New York, and its ?lawyers did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Michael Connett, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, said courts have been receptive to ?deceptive labeling claims. “These rulings will hopefully send a wake-up call to ?manufacturers to ?stop promoting unsafe use of fluoride products,” he said.
