Sports drink marketer to drop 'hydration champ' claim after NAD ruling
The National Advertising Division has ruled that an implied claim that BodyArmor Flash I.V. Sport Drink provides superior hydration performance is unsubstantiated.
A recent National Advertising Division (NAD) ruling found a marketing claim that a sports drink is the “hydration champ” is over the top and should be toned down. The manufacturer said it disagrees with the ruling but will comply, following a challenge from a competitor.
The ruling pertained to claims being made by BA Sports Nutrition LLC (BA). The company sells a product branded as BodyArmor Flash I.V. Sport Drink, and was using the slogan “The Rehydration Champ is Here” in its marketing.
The drink is a fairly standard hydration sports drink formula. It features 530 mg (milligrams) of both sodium and potassium as well as 15 grams of cane sugar (as well as some B vitamins).
Advent of the modern hydration formula
This hydration approach was pioneered by doctors working with the Florida Gators college football team in the mid 1960s and came to be known as Gatorade. It trades on the idea of using sodium-linked glucose transport to speed the rate of hydration and electrolyte replenishment for athletes exercising in hot weather.
In the idea’s first debut on the national stage, the 1967 Orange Bowl football game, the losing coach attributed the fact that his team faded in the second half vis-à-vis the Florida team to the Gators' use of the formulation that gave birth to the first Gatorade.
Since then, the formulas of rehydration sports drinks have varied, but most generally include some form of sugar along with sodium and potassium.
Little evidence on which formulas work best
A significant amount of research has been done over the years on the role of electrolyte replenishment in sports performance. However, there is little evidence regarding which of the many similar formulas work the best in terms of rapidly raising electrolyte levels in the blood.
“Although extensively researched for decades, it remains unclear what compositions of carbohydrate–electrolyte solutions for fluid replacement in exercise can be considered optimal in different settings,” according to a recent extensive review of the subject authored by scientists at Abbott Nutrition and collaborators and published in the journal Nutrients.
NAD: Implied superior performance claim not supported
The claims BA was making were deemed by NAD to imply that its formula was superior to others. That claim was challenged by competitor Stokely-Van Camp Inc. (SVC), which markets another product in the “rapid rehydration” category branded as Gatorlyte. SVC’s formula includes 490 mg of sodium and 350 mg of potassium.
“Although Flash I.V. has more electrolytes than Gatorlyte, in the absence of any comparative product or performance testing in the record on the rehydration benefit of Flash I.V. as compared to Gatorlyte or other competing sports drinks, NAD determined that BA’s ‘The Rehydration Champ is Here’ claim was not supported,” the NAD ruled.
In its advertiser statement, BA said it “disagrees with NAD’s conclusion but agrees to comply.” In any case, the company noted, the claim at issue was part of the market launch advertising campaign for BodyArmor Flash I.V. Sport Drink and had already been discontinued.
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