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Recent research highlights the risks of paracetamol, especially in influencing risk-taking behavior. Ohio State University found 1000 mg of acetaminophen reduced negative emotions, making ...
Boots confirmed its batch of its 500mg tablets were labelled incorrectly (Picture: Aspar Pharmaceuticals Ltd/PA Wire) Boots has issued an urgent recall for its own-brand paracetamol over a ...
It warned people to check packs before taking the tablets. The affected packages are Boots Paracetamol 500mg tablets which contain 16 tablets. Boots say the product could be "dangerous" because one ...
People who have purchased Boots Paracetamol 500mg Tablets 16s with the batch number 241005 – which can be found on the bottom of the box – and expiry date 12/2029 have been urged to stop using the ...
People who have purchased Boots Paracetamol 500mg Tablets 16s (Item code 81-99-922, Batch 241005, Expiry date 12/2029) are advised to stop using the product immediately and return it to a Boots ...
People who have purchased Boots Paracetamol 500mg Tablets 16s (batch 241005, expiry date 12/2029) have been urged to stop using the product immediately by the Medicines and Healthcare products ...
The recall applies to Boots Paracetamol 500mg Tablets 16s with the item code 81-99-922, batch code 241005, and an expiry date of 12/2029. The batch and expiry details are on the top of the pack ...
The affected foil blister packs of 16 tablets inside paracetamol boxes were incorrectly packaged as "Aspirin 300mg Dispersible Tablets" despite actually being 500mg paracetamol tablets.
BOOTS have urgently recalled paracetamol tablets from shelves and warned shoppers to avoid taking them. The high street pharmacy stuck a "do not take" alert on a batch of its 500mg tablets.
The high street retailer said paracetamol 500mg tablets has been incorrectly packaged with a foil blister insert for Boots Aspirin 300mg dispersible tablets. Responding to comments on Facebook ...
Boots has urgently recalled one of its own-brand paracetamol from shelves over a 'packaging error'. The high street pharmacy stuck a 'do not take' alert on a batch of its 500mg tablets.