Emily Sortor  |  February 22, 2019

Category: Legal News

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ready-to-drink bottle of Joint JuiceA class action lawsuit alleging that Joint Juice doesn’t really lubricate joints as advertised has been removed to federal court. 

Plaintiff Patricia Bland says she purchased 6-packs of 8-ounce ready-to-drink bottles of Joint Juice multiple times between 2015 and January 2018.

She claims that Joint Juice is advertised as a line of joint health dietary supplements that will support and nourish cartilage, lubricating joints, and improve joint comfort.

However, Bland argues that these claims are false because the product’s main ingredient does not promote joint health.

The Joint Juice class action lawsuit states that Bland and other consumers were misled into believing that the product would help their joint health, because they relied on the product’s packaging to make their purchasing decision.

The plaintiff notes that there is no other reason why customers buy Joint Juice other than to improve their joint health, so the fact that the product does not improve joint health causes financial injury to customers who purchase the product.

According to the Joint Juice class action lawsuit, Joint Juice marketing materials state in numerous locations that the product “helps keep cartilage lubricated and flexible,” and that customers should “drink daily for healthy, flexible joints.”

The Joint Juice class action lawsuit says that the product contains the active ingredients chondroitin sulfate and glucosamine hydrochloride, which is a combination of glucosamine (an amino sugar compound produced by the body and which can be isolated from shellfish).

Allegedly, Joint Juice’s makers claim that these are the ingredients that will improve joint health. However, Bland says that glucosamine is not effective in providing joint health benefits, whether used alone or in combination with other ingredients including chondroitin sulfate.

To support this claim, Bland says that research conducted by the National Institute of Health has indicated that glucosamine is not effective at “producing joint health benefits, including pain, stiffness, range of motion, flexibility, and cartilage benefits.”

The Joint Juice class action lawsuit states that the product is primarily marketed towards people with osteoarthritis, especially those in the early stages or those who have yet to be formally diagnosed and wish to take steps to improve their health.

Bland argues that Premier Nutrition Corporation, the company that makes Joint Juice, relies on customers’ desire to improve joint health in order to sell their product.

The Joint Juice class action claims that Premier Nutrition Corporation knew or should have known that scientific research indicates that the main ingredient in their product is not effective, but markets and sells the products as if they are effective in an effort to maximize their profits.

Bland is represented by Timothy G. Blood, Leslie E. Hurst, Thomas J. O’Reardon II, and Paula R. Brown of Blood Hurst & O’Reardon LLP; by Craig M. Peters of Altair Law; and by Todd D. Carpenter of Carlson Lynch Sweet Kilpela & Carpenter LLP.

The Joint Juice False Advertising Class Action Lawsuit is Patricia Bland v. Premier Nutrition Corporation, Case No. 3:19-cv-00875, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.

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402 thoughts onJoint Juice Class Action Lawsuit Says Product Doesn’t Lubricate Joints

  1. Jeff Kindrick says:

    I have been challenged with rheumatoid arthritis for 40 years and have been using Joint Juice since about 2009. I had taken glucosamine/chondroitin suplements for a decade or more with no noticable result. The first bottle of Joint Juice I tried was given to me by my sister who was in the nutrition industry and I could feel the difference the next day. I order it several cases at a time and mix it with two tablespoons of Certo to drink it at bedtime.

    I’ve learned over the years that everyone’s physiology is unique and reacts differently to different things. There are no guarantees; if I filed a lawsuit for every medication or supplement that has not worked for me or even made me feel worse I would be rich enough to keep an army of attorneys on retainer. When you file a class action suit like this, a lot of people receive a pittance, a law firm makes a mint and the folks that actually like and benefit from the product end up paying more for it. Worst case scenario, the manufacturer goes out of business and those who benefit from the product suffer. It’s a different case if you are actually harmed by a product, but you’re trying to make the company suffer because you don’t believe it helped you.

    1. Helen Deen says:

      I concur

  2. Willie G. says:

    My joints are no different after use. Add me pls.

  3. D Schatzi Taylor says:

    They should be ashamed of themselves! Please add me.

  4. Mary shoback says:

    I have So many of these bottles please add me thank you very much

    1. Stanley Culbreth says:

      If you still have bottles of joint juice I will buy them from you??

  5. Louis Garcia says:

    Please add me to the lawsuit
    Purchased 2 bottles and it doesn’t have any effect on my joints

  6. RAYMOND E. HUNDLEY says:

    Please,add me to the lawsuit. I’ve bought this product for a long time.

  7. Valoria Ross says:

    Add me

    1. Sandra Sincell says:

      Add me please

  8. Kevin Moore says:

    Add me i been taking joint juice never did anything for me.

  9. joanne adamo says:

    add me i been taking this regularly

  10. Patricia Arleen Long says:

    Please add me

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