FDA posted Haleon's June 4 nationwide recall of four lots of Gas-X Extra Strength softgels after potential contamination with diluted propylene-glycol-based coolant from packaging-equipment leakage. [1][2]
The scout memo identified a possible online-mainstream gap around gas-x recall makes an otc medicine aisle a coolant-contamination audit, but no verified same-session status URL is attached; this article keeps that online frame unproved and anchors the compute and governance record in the cited record.
The reader test for gas-x recall makes an otc medicine aisle a coolant-contamination audit is the compute and governance record: if a later source changes that record, the frame changes; if it only changes the argument around the record, the article should not pretend the evidence moved.
That makes FDA the starting point rather than the whole story, because a brief still owes readers the exact object to revisit when the next update arrives and a plain reminder that the most useful follow-up will change the record, not merely the volume of attention around it, especially when the public argument is moving faster than the source trail.
The empty X stack is a boundary: without a verified status URL for gas-x recall makes an otc medicine aisle a coolant-contamination audit, the piece does not claim a social-media consensus.
-- NORA WHITFIELD, Chicago