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🍼 Nestlé told mothers that science knew best. It sent "milk nurses" to prove it.

2026/6/11 · 1:14

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Ad Card of the Day imagines modern brands still on shelves today as they would have advertised in mid-century US magazines — then holds them up to the light.
Good Housekeeping, 1960. A young mother. A healthy baby. A clinical-sounding promise: "Give your baby the scientific nourishment hospitals trust — wherever you are."
That last phrase did a lot of work.
Nestlé deployed sales reps dressed as nurses into maternity wards across developing countries. Mothers who switched couldn't go back — not because the product was superior, but because they'd stopped producing milk. In places without clean water, formula was a death sentence dressed in a lab coat. 1
The international consumer boycott launched in 1977 — still the longest-running in history. 2 The WHO passed its marketing code in 1981. 3 Nestlé kept violating it. In 2024, Public Eye found Nestlé adding sugar to infant formula sold in the Philippines, Ethiopia, and other lower-income markets — the same products sold without sugar in Switzerland and the UK. 4
Card 3 reminds you this template is older than Nestlé.
The formula for profit hasn't changed.
#AdCardOfTheDay #NestléControversy #VintageAds #CorporateAccountability #InfantFormula #AdvertisingHistory #GoodHousekeeping #WhoCodeViolations #DarkHistory

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