that’s not true. they’re brand names. they have ~50 different products. Benadryl, admittedly, has way more products than Tylenol. regardless, it’s not all ace and not all diphen.
is it really that big of an ask for a doctor to prescribe medication and not a corporate brand name? especially when it comes to one’s health?
It is though. I’m sorry, but you’re wrong. For a product to be sold as Tylenol, the main active ingredient legally must be acetaminophen. Tylenol products can contain other ingredients, but acetaminophen must be the primary active component to be labeled and marketed as tylenol. This is true of benadryl always having to have as the main ingredient diphenhydramine.
is it really that big of an ask for a doctor to prescribe medication and not a corporate brand name?
In a better world, we wouldn’t have corporate brand names at all. But a doctor using such a name (in the world we live) is not misusing the name.
For a product to be sold as Tylenol, the main active ingredient legally must be acetaminophen. Tylenol products can contain other ingredients, but acetaminophen must be the primary active component to be labeled and marketed as tylenol. This is true of benadryl always having to have as the main ingredient diphenhydramine.
this is not true. idk exactly what you mean by “labeled and marketed as tylenol” but just using those terms generally - it’s not true.
or conversely, if it is true - then there’s a lot of Tylenol and Benadryl that’s violating the law at all my local stores.
I don’t know what to tell you because it very much is true. What are the stores near you selling that they are calling Tylenol but that does not have acetaminophen as the primary ingredient? If you go buy a drug from them that is labeled Tylenol and it does not have acetaminophen as the main ingredient, then you could probably make a lot of money suing whoever it was in the distribution chain that changed and mislabeled a drug.
I’ve had different doctors refer to drugs by brand and generic names. Those that use generic names tend to also emphasize to buy generic due to price point.
that’s not true. they’re brand names. they have ~50 different products. Benadryl, admittedly, has way more products than Tylenol. regardless, it’s not all ace and not all diphen.
is it really that big of an ask for a doctor to prescribe medication and not a corporate brand name? especially when it comes to one’s health?
It is though. I’m sorry, but you’re wrong. For a product to be sold as Tylenol, the main active ingredient legally must be acetaminophen. Tylenol products can contain other ingredients, but acetaminophen must be the primary active component to be labeled and marketed as tylenol. This is true of benadryl always having to have as the main ingredient diphenhydramine.
In a better world, we wouldn’t have corporate brand names at all. But a doctor using such a name (in the world we live) is not misusing the name.
this is not true. idk exactly what you mean by “labeled and marketed as tylenol” but just using those terms generally - it’s not true.
or conversely, if it is true - then there’s a lot of Tylenol and Benadryl that’s violating the law at all my local stores.
I don’t know what to tell you because it very much is true. What are the stores near you selling that they are calling Tylenol but that does not have acetaminophen as the primary ingredient? If you go buy a drug from them that is labeled Tylenol and it does not have acetaminophen as the main ingredient, then you could probably make a lot of money suing whoever it was in the distribution chain that changed and mislabeled a drug.
I’ve had different doctors refer to drugs by brand and generic names. Those that use generic names tend to also emphasize to buy generic due to price point.