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- BUSINESS, Page 47Business NotesCONSUMER PRODUCTSIs It a Drug Or a Cereal?
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- Psyllium is not exactly a household staple, but the obscure
- grain has provoked a kitchen-table brawl between General Mills
- and Procter & Gamble. Psyllium contains soluble fiber, which has
- been shown to reduce cholesterol levels. The grain is an
- ingredient in Benefit, a new breakfast cereal General Mills
- introduced in May. Psyllium is also found in Metamucil, one of
- P&G's fiber laxatives. But while General Mills is allowed to
- advertise that Benefit helps to reduce cholesterol, P&G is
- forbidden to make the same claim for its laxative unless it can
- get FDA approval, which P&G has tried but failed to get so far.
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- P&G has urged the FDA to order the cereal off the market.
- But General Mills, which has limited Benefit's sales mostly to
- the Midwest, intends to fight back. Says a spokesman: "There's
- no question that it's a food and not a drug. It's packaged like
- a cereal, it looks like a cereal, and it's sold like a cereal."
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