CVS is under fire for allegedly sold this to buyers
This is an article that has also been at the top of the lists of many buyers.
With 10,000 stores located in almost all the states of the country, CVS is thepharmacy And the point of sale for many Americans. But one of the most popular articles on many grocery lists is the subject of a new exam - and this is very good something you have in your home right now. Read the rest to discover what it is and how you could be affected.
Read this then:CVS is under fire to refuse to let buyers do this.
CVS recently made the headlines for a range of legal issues.
Last week, a federal judge ruled that a collective appeal against CVS for refusing to fill in high -dose opioid orders for a patient can go ahead. It was the lastdevelopment in legal proceedings Reported by Pain News Network in a potentially previous case.
This specific case concerns a Florida patient namedEdith Fuog, a survivor of breast cancer with medical conditions, in particular the neuralgia of the Trijumeau, lupus, arthritis and other chronic diseases. The patient had continued CVS in 2020, when she said that the company had discriminated against her and had violated the Americans law with disabilities (ADA) in her refusal to fulfill her prescriptions.
In her trial, the patient alleges that the CVS pharmacists refused to fill her prescriptions of high -dose opioids tens of times because the daily doses exceeded the threshold considered as risky under the directives of the centers for diseease control (CDC) Established in 2016. This directive is technically voluntary, but health care providers often apply it.
Now CVS is the target of another collective recourse concerning his disinfectant.
A new collective recourse alleges that CVS Health misleads consumers by saying that his hand disinfectant based on store alcohol kills 99.99% of germs. ApplicantMarysusan Catholdi-Jankowski Affirms that it is "scientifically proven" that disinfectants for alcohol-based hands like this do not really fulfill this assertion.
"It is difficult to believe that the disinfectant from the hands of the defendants kills 99.99% of all the germs while excluding the family of viruses which causes more than half of all the diseases of food origin in the country", theCVS States, as cited in the best collective remedies.
We contacted CVS Health to comment; The company has not yet responded.
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Affirmations of CVS collective appeal know that its claims are false.
The applicant alleges that CVS knows that scientific evidence does not exist to support these complaints. "The labels of the products are therefore materially misleading in that they clearly declare, in a way giving the impression that it has been scientifically proven, that the product kills 99.99% of the germs when studies show that it Do not kill many types of germs ", the" CVS Class Collage States according to the best collective remedies.
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The collective appeal says that CVS is guilty of fraud and requests a trial with jury and damages.
The trial claims that the declaration affects "hundreds of thousands" of consumers, giving them "a false belief" in the protection offered by the disinfectant that they dropped into their cart and depended on their safety. Instead, he says that this wide range of consumers has been misleading. And indeed, this means that CVS is guilty of unjust fraud and enrichment and violation of New York general business law. The applicant requests a trial with jury and requests an injunction as well as damages for all members of the course.
And this is not the first time that CVS will have to answer for a similar problem: in March, a consumer has filed a similar collective appeal on the storedisinfectant complaints, according to the best collective remedies.
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