
Marketers of health
products -- or should we say “alleged” health products? -- come under fire in two of the five “Deceptive Ad Trends 2024” published by nonprofit group Truth in Advertising
(Tina.org). The other trends touch on AI, “free” products/services, and airline fuel.
One area to watch is hormonal/menopause claims, Tina.org says. This trend was largely based on
its most popular 2023 ad alert about Happy Mammoth’s Hormone Harmony, “a supplement marketed to balance hormones as users ‘go through perimenopause, menopause, PCOS and their
irritating symptoms such as cramps, hot flashes and mood swings.’”
Pursuant to FDA law,Tina.org writes, “no company can market supplements claiming to balance hormones
or to reduce, improve, help or assist with abnormal conditions associated with menopause without going through the agency’s rigorous review process.”
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Consumers should also watch
out for product claims of FDA approval and FDA clearance which “may be misleading, if not outright false.” The FDA, for instance, does not “approve” supplements, and while
marketers of medical devices can get FDA clearance if it’s “substantially equivalent” to a product that’s already achieved clearance, Tina.org warns that with clearance comes
ad boundaries.
One of those boundaries is not to make it appear that the FDA favors or endorses a product, a violation Tina.org says Top Dog Direct violated by using the FDA logo in ads for a
BeActive Plus leg brace (for sciatica). “It worked so well, the FDA cleared BeActive Plus as a medical device,” a TV commercial for the product notes.
Other deceptive ad trends to
watch in 2024, Tina.org says, are AI, use of the word “free” and claims that aviation fuels are sustainable.
The group cited its court settlement with Roblox over the game
platform’s use of AI bots “to manipulate and mislead consumers, including millions of children, into thinking they are interacting with real people.” It also cautions against fake
reviews “as AI makes it easier for disreputable businesses to create persuasive reviews that sound like they were written by actual users.”
Tina.org cites HelloFresh’s Good
Chop meat and seafood D2C business as currently running ads offering “free bacon for life” after previously advertising “free chicken wings for life.” Federal law states that
marketers “must clearly and conspicuously disclose” any stipulations upfront and not in fine print, says the nonprofit, noting that in the first instance, “the wings were neither
free nor did they last for life…The actual offer, only available to new customers with an autorenewing subscription purchase, only lasted a year and at any point the company could substitute
the chicken wings for anything it wanted.”
As to those sustainable aviation fuels (SAFs), they account for just 0.1% of airlines’ fuel worldwide, Tina.org says, but airlines are
touting their use “to appeal to eco-conscious consumers.” Lufthansa recently removed the line “Fly more sustainably” from one of its Google ads after a challenge from the
UK’s Advertising Standards Authority. But, says Tina.org, “the list is growing and includes names such as United Airline and Royal Dutch Airlines.”