Therapeutic claims on a website linked to food
- Classification
- Non-compliance notification
- Risk
- No risk
- Category
- dietetic foods, food supplements and fortified foods
- Origin
- Belgium
- Notifier
- France
What is this? A website in France sold food that claimed to help with health problems. This is not allowed for regular foods.
What's happening? France told the seller to stop making these health claims. The food itself is safe, but the claims were wrong.
Does this affect me? Only if you bought food from this website that made health promises. Most normal foods are fine.
What should I do? If you have this food, stop using it. Ask your doctor or pharmacist if you have questions.
🤖 This plain-language summary is automatically generated from the official agency notice using AI. It is for general information only — not medical advice. For decisions about your health, always consult a pharmacist or doctor and read the official source linked below.
🔬 Medical / technical details (for professionals)
Classification: Non-compliance notification · Risk: No risk · Category: dietetic foods, food supplements and fortified foods · Origin: Belgium · Notifier: France
All information on this page comes from the official agency notice. We translate and summarise it; we don't add or edit facts.