Johnson & Johnson CEO admits letdown
TRENTON, N.J. -- With Johnson & Johnson's once-golden reputation tarnished by 11 recalls of medicines, contact lenses and hip implants in as many months, its chief executive says he knows the company let consumers down.
J&J plans a public campaign to help rebuild their trust but not until after about 40 recalled nonprescription medicines are back on store shelves sometime early next year. In the meantime, the company also is doing everything possible "to make sure this never happens again," CEO William C. Weldon told the Associated Press.
The maker of trusted brands including Johnson's No More Tears baby shampoo, Tylenol pain reliever and Neosporin antibiotic ointment, has announced repeated recalls since late last September. Nine involved nonprescription medicines -- from
Children's Benadryl to Tylenol Arthritis -- made by its McNeil Consumer Healthcare unit.
The biggest was an astounding April 30 recall of 136 million bottles of children's and infants' liquid medicines that might have contained tiny metal particles or have too much active ingredient.
"We've learned a lot of lessons. They've been very painful," Weldon said Friday, adding that he has received a number of letters from consumers, "some supportive and some not."
No serious injuries have been linked to any recalled products.
But Congress, federal prosecutors and the Food and Drug Administration's Office of Criminal Investigation are looking into the handling of the recalls, including a "stealth" one in 2008 in which J&J allegedly paid a third party to secretly pull Motrin packets with questionable potency off store shelves.
William C. Weldon
Age: 61
Education: Quinnipiac University, bachelor's degree.
Personal: Married, two children, one grandson.
Professional experience: Johnson & Johnson chairman and CEO since April 2002. Previously served as: worldwide head of J&J's pharmaceuticals division, since 1998; chairman of Ethicon Endo-Surgery, which makes products and procedures for minimally invasive surgery, since 1995, and president of that business, since 1992.
Weldon joined Johnson & Johnson in 1971 in pharmaceuticals sales. He moved up in sales management positions in Southeast Asia and London before heading up sales and marketing at Janssen Pharmaceutica, a unit that develops many of J&J's prescription drugs, starting in 1989.
He also serves as chairman of the CEO Roundtable on Cancer and vice chair of The Business Council.
Source: Associated Press
All this from the company almost revered for its honesty and caution when an unknown perpetrator laced Tylenol bottles with cyanide in Chicago in 1982.
This week was particularly bad for the world's biggest health-products maker. J&J received a warning from the Food and Drug Administration about illegal marketing of some hip and knee implants and two more recalls: one involving two other hip implant products and one involving contact lenses sold in Asia and Europe that stung some users' eyes.
Asked if he can assure consumers that there won't be any more recalls, Weldon said, "I don't think you can ever say 'never' to anything."
He said the company, based in New Brunswick, has checked quality standards at its 120 factories, realigned its supply chain to make sure "best practices" are shared and set up a new organizational structure with executives focused solely on quality.
The manager of one of three McNeil factories where the recalled medicines were made has been fired, but J&J won't discuss other personnel changes.
Last week, J&J appointed a new quality director who will report directly to Weldon and oversee three "chief quality officers," one each for J&J's consumer products, prescription drug and medical device businesses.
While all the recalls won't jeopardize the financial health of a company with about $63 billion in annual revenue, they have made a dent: The McNeil recalls and plant closure will cost J&J $600 million this year alone.
Weldon said it was premature to discuss plans for a media campaign.
"I think the best thing we can do is get (products) back on store shelves for the people that need them," Weldon said. "From there we will have to go back and earn our reputation."
Al Ries, chairman of Atlanta marketing consultants Ries & Ries, said that given J&J's "unprecedented" 11 recalls, it will take time for people to forget about the problems, but they will, eventually.
Comments
Use the comment form below to begin a discussion about this content.
Notice about comments:Postandcourier.com is pleased to offer readers the enhanced ability to comment on stories. We expect our readers to engage in lively, yet civil discourse. Postandcourier.com does not edit user submitted statements and we cannot promise that readers will not occasionally find offensive or inaccurate comments posted in the comments area. Responsibility for the statements posted lies with the person submitting the comment, not postandcourier.com. If you find a comment that is objectionable, please click "report abuse" and we will review it for possible removal. Please be reminded, however, that in accordance with our Terms of Use and federal law, we are under no obligation to remove any third party comments posted on our website. Read our full Terms and Conditions.
Users can now build user-to-user connections, follow friends' recent posts, add an avatar that fits their personality, and more. If you have posted here before you'll need to sign up again, or if you've never posted before, start now by signing up!
- Most Commented
- Most Emailed
- Shared
- Upper King on rise: Hotels, apartments, restaurants changing face of downtown area
- Missing woman case gets murkier
- Missing woman's fiance found dead in his home
- Isle of Palms wants to patch beach
- Body of missing woman's fiance was found near handgun
- DAVID SLADE: S.C. offers hybrid car tax credit
- Advocating for cyclists
- Pinterest: Pinning hopes and dreams
- Facebook posts may cost you a job
- Black women today: Strong. Resilient. Ambitious.


