The lawsuit has left Airborne no choice but to refund the money back to the customers who believed that the product had worked for them and they are now going to recall the product.
People who are looking for a refund on the product can go to the website at AirborneHealthSettlement.com for further information.
After seeing advertisements that made the Airborne product look good and worth the money, I purchased this product. After a while, I noticed that the product was not holding up to its end of the bargain and vowed to never use it again. I was very dissatisfied and should have known better than to purchase this so-called miracle medicine.
I have heard many people claim that the Airborne product worked for them and had often wondered why it hadn't showed any improvement in myself. Was it that I just that I wanted the product to fail and made myself sick or did the product really not work?
It doesn't matter if you believe or don't believe that a product should work, if it is properly tested then it should hold up to the claims that the company makes and you shouldn't have to rely on faith alone.
As far as the lawsuit goes, I believe that they should have to pay something back to the consumers. Why would a company allow that many people to put their trust in them if they never even really considered the consequences to begin with? Airborne should have never made any claims and made people believe that the product would actually work.
Companies like these make millions of dollars off of consumers and I am sure that they can afford to give back the money on a product that they claimed would cure the cold. Making false claims like these will not only put companies in hot water but will also have the consumers loosing all faith in their products.
Proper testing should have been done to see if this product would actually hold up to what they were claiming that it could do. If they would have done proper testing, they wouldn't be in a class action lawsuit today and many consumers wouldn't be in an outrage over this.
I remember when they first started advertising on the television and in magazines claiming that they could cure a cold with their product and boost your immune system. I didn't believe it at first and I should have trusted my gut feeling on this one.
If a product like this would have worked, then why weren't more doctors recommending it to their patients? It just doesn't make any sense. As for Airborne, I can't wait to see what other false products that they come out with.
Published by Rosa Hayes
Rosa is a full time student at OCCC with a major in political science. She is currently the author of many articles on parenting, life skills, family, and careers as well as many other things. View profile
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