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Section 24 of the Therapeutic Goods Advertising Code 2021 (Code) sets out the requirements for using endorsements and testimonials in advertisements about therapeutic goods. This guidance explains the requirements and provides examples.
Therapeutic goods are not ordinary consumer goods, with consumers of therapeutic goods a more vulnerable consumer cohort. It is appropriate and important that rules are in place surrounding the advertising of therapeutic goods to support informed consumer health care choices.
The Code prohibits certain individuals and organisations from endorsing therapeutic goods or making testimonials about them. This is to ensure consumers are not influenced excessively or inappropriately by endorsements and testimonials, and health care choices are made on the basis of an individual's personal circumstances rather than the experience of another.
While testimonials are a type of endorsement, an endorsement is not a testimonial:
- an endorsement is a form of support, approval or sanction
- a testimonial is a statement about a therapeutic good made by a person who claims to have used that good or to have used it while caring for someone else.