94% OF CHICKS DIG IT
Not going to lie I don't like this product at all. I much prefer softer, better smelling newer baby wash. I think the fact that people use it for their dogs says enough about it. Just not a huge fan at all
I won't use Johnson & Johnson products....especially the baby products because of the terrible ingredients they continue to leave in their products or phase out slowly. Babies should not have these chemicals put on their skin if it can be avoided.
I grew up with Johnson's products and planned to use them on my children as well - until I did some research and realized that the ingredients used to make their products are not only garbage, but dangerous to the health of the those that use them. It's a shame because so many people don't know this and continue to use the products. There are so many better products out there!
My reasons for giving this shampoo such a bad review are because if you do research on this and many others Johnson & Johnson products you will see that they are actually made with some very bad ingredients. I have stopped using these products.
With the articles out explaining how the ingredients in the children shampoo is cancer causing I have fallen from a loyal customer of the product to never going to purchase again!!
I used to use this product and used to love it until Johnson and Johnson admitted to having cancer causing ingredients in the baby shampoo, now I refuse to buy it
i do not like to use johnson and johnson products as they put cancer causing chemicals into them. Dioxane 1,4-dioxane, is considered a likely carcinogen. Most commonly, 1,4-dioxane is found in products that create suds, like shampoo, liquid soap and bubble bath and Quaternium-15 is a formaldehyde-releasing preservative
I wouldn't dare use this on my baby.. Johnson & Johnson’s baby shampoo containes the formaldehyde-releasing preservative quaternium-15, as well as the chemical byproduct 1,4-dioxane. Formaldehyde and 1,4-dioxane are known carcinogens. The federal Consumer Product Safety Commission has reported that “the presence of 1,4-dioxane, even as a trace contaminant, is cause for concern,” and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services added formaldehyde to its list of known human carcinogens in June 2011.
These reviews are the subjective opinions of ChickAdvisor members and not of ChickAdvisor Inc.