FDA's June 3 recall index lists Better Weather Fix Elixir 15 ml under a May 28 dietary-supplement recall for undeclared mitragynine and mitragynine pseudoindoxyl, placing a kratom-compound label problem inside the agency's broader consumer-alert stack. [1]
The company notice says all lots of Better Weather Fix Elixir 15 ml are covered, not just a dated batch or a single distribution channel, which makes the reader task simple and unforgiving for anyone with the product at home. [2]
The same notice warns that mitragynine pseudoindoxyl is a more potent derivative of mitragynine and can cause nausea, rapid heart rate, hallucinations, sedation, anxiety, loss of consciousness, respiratory suppression and addiction risk. [2]
It also says no adverse events related to the recall had been reported as of the May 28 posting, a sentence that belongs beside the risk language because absence of reports is not the same as absence of undeclared compounds. [2]
That is the difference between wellness copy and a label story: the article is not about whether customers like kratom or whether regulators should treat it harshly, but about an all-lot recall of a 15 ml bottle whose listed contents did not match the compounds FDA says mattered to safety.
-- NORA WHITFIELD, Chicago