Talk:Cēpacol
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editCepacol also makes soothing throat lozenges as well as other troat relieving products.
The last line of this article seems like merchandising and provides no source. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 69.209.223.56 (talk) 04:09, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
Cepacol is sole in countries other than the US - indeed, there is actualy a world outside of the US! The Cepacol brand is owned by different drug houses in diferent countries, ie in Australia it is owned by Bayer.... also, different formulations are avaliable in different countries —Preceding unsigned comment added by 121.209.51.238 (talk) 02:04, 5 September 2009 (UTC)
External links modified
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Ownership history mistake
editThis article's 3rd and 4th sentences currently read: "The brand was originally owned by J.B. Williams. Following acquisition by Combe Incorporated, Combe Incorporated sold Cepacol to Reckitt Benckiser in 2011." This is incorrect. It's true in terms of ownership from J.B. Williams and beyond, but J.B. Williams bought the brand from SmithKline Beecham plc in 1994, according to this New York Times article from the time; SmithKline Beecham had bought it from Marion Merrell Dow Inc. in 1992, according to the Chicago Tribune from the time -- and in fact Cepacol is currently mentioned in the intro to the Marion Marrell Dow wiki article, with a citation to the 1994 International Directory of Company Histories which notes Merrell Dow owning Cepacol prior to its 1989 merger with Marion Laboratories; and Merrell Dow's predecessor Richardson-Merrell Inc. seems to have originated the Cepacol line in 1965 based on this trademark application. So likely the brand's original owners were Richardson-Merrell, not J.B. Williams, who were at least 2 owners and almost 30 years removed from the original owners and creators. If we really stretch, I guess those aforementioned lines of the Cepacol article could technically just be saying "Cepacol was owned by J.B. Williams before it was owned by Combe", which is factually correct. But the way it's written now implies J.B. Williams were the very first owners. I assume that's what the original contributor believed to be the case when they wrote it, maybe they'd read Combe bought it from J.B. Williams and didn't see any prior info and assumed that's where it started. But since the evidence suggests otherwise, there's no real reason to start off by mentioning the brand's 3rd-most-recent owner and make no mention of its 2 or 3 other owners prior to that. In any case I think the current wording of "the brand was originally owned" is misleading, so this should be amended and updated in some way. --VolatileChemical (talk) 22:18, 31 December 2021 (UTC)