A Trusted Friend in a Complicated World

The 2019 Reader’s Digest Most Trusted Brands in America—Health and Wellness

Updated: Apr. 27, 2021

See if the products you use every day made the list.

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Trusted Brands
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

We want to have faith in the products we buy—after all, no one wants to waste money. But when a purchase involves our health, the expectation of quality is paramount. That’s why this annual Reader’s Digest Trusted Brands survey focuses on 35 categories affecting our well-being, from medications and supplements to health devices and food—even what’s best for our pets. Professional guidance is important, of course. But with their rich histories, these are the products consumers have come to trust the most.

Reader’s Digest surveys its readers every year so that you know which products you can trust when shopping. Check out the results of the 2020 Trusted Brands survey.

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Tylenol
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Headache and pain reliever: Tylenol

Along with gravity and potato chips, Tylenol is one of history’s great accidental discoveries. In 1886, a pair of German medical students were treating a patient’s intestinal worms (ew) when they mistakenly dosed her with a chemical cocktail that her body metabolized into acetaminophen. The patient’s fever broke. Aceta­minophen became popular across Europe, and in 1955, the Philadelphia family running McNeil Laboratories, a pharmaceutical company, brought the drug to America as Tylenol Elixir for Children, a prescription-­only antipyretic packaged like a tiny red fire truck and marketed “for little hotheads.” The marketing, and the medicine, worked. Today, Tylenol heals hot heads (large and little) in 13 countries. Use these secrets for finding a doctor you can trust.

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Dove soap and body wash
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Soap and body wash: Dove

 It’s the number-one-selling soap in the United States, thanks in large part to its most famous ­ingredient: “moisturizing cream.”

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Chobani Greek Yogurt
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Greek yogurt: Chobani

 The name means “shepherd”—but not in Greek. Hamdi Ulukaya, who founded the company, came to the United States from his native Turkey in 1994.

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Dr. Scholl's foot care
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Foot care: Dr. Scholl’s

William Scholl, a Chicago shoe salesman turned medical doctor, created his first arch support in 1904, before he’d even graduated from med school.

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ZzzQuil
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Sleep aid: ZzzQuil

Unlike some other over-the-counter sleep aids, ZzzQuil contains no pain relievers. Also unlike other brands, it comes in dreamy-sounding flavors such as Calming Vanilla Cherry and Warming Berry.

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Nature Made Fish Oil
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Fish oil: Nature Made

Science has yet to establish the effectiveness of many supplements, but fish oil has long been shown to help prevent heart disease.

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Depend incontinence product
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Incontinence product: Depend

Some people might feel uneasy having to ask a store clerk for help buying this product. Fortunately, Depend sends free sample kits to new customers. These are the mistakes that doctors wish you would stop making.

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Re-nu Bausch + Lomb contact solution
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Contact solution: Bausch + Lomb

 Used lenses can clog pipes and sink to the bottom of waterways. Bausch + Lomb’s recycling program has safely disposed of more than 2.5 million pairs since 2016.

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Olay antiaging skin care
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Antiaging skin care: Olay

A year after its launch, in 2018, Olay’s Regenerist Whip has become the top-selling new skin-care product. Number two: Regenerist Whip with SPF 25.

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Nyquil
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Cold & flu remedy: NyQuil

People with high blood pressure get sick, too, but decongestants can be dangerous for them. NyQuil’s HBP formula is specially made without decongestants.

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Aveeno moisturizer
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Moisturizer: Aveeno

In the 1940s, an oatmeal bath by American brothers Albert and Sidney Musher worked wonders as an eczema treatment. Since then, Aveeno—from the Latin for “oat”—has pioneered dozens of nature-based skin products.

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Visine
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Eye care: Visine

Original Visine just treats redness. Relief from itching, dryness, or other conditions requires one of the more advanced formulas.

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Always feminine protection
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Feminine protection: Always

Ten states have dropped their tax on feminine-hygiene products in recent years.

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Neutrogena facial cleanser
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Facial cleanser: Neutrogena

Wash your face with plain water, and your skin returns to its natural pH in ten minutes. Add famously mild Neutrogena, and the process takes only one more minute, according to the company’s research.

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Metamucil fiber supplement
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Fiber supplement: Metamucil

Fiber from the husk of the psyllium plant is Metamucil’s main ingredient and has a surprising side effect: Studies show that it can lower your cholesterol.

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Lean Cuisine healthy frozen meal
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Healthy frozen meal: Lean Cuisine

How healthy? Even the Salisbury Steak with Macaroni & Cheese is good for you. In fact, the website eatthis.com says that, in terms of its balance of calories, protein, fat, and carbs, it is Lean Cuisine’s healthiest meal.

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Benadryl
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Itch relief/allergy relief: Benadryl

In 1933, George Rieveschl sent out 200 applications in hopes of becoming a commercial artist. He got nothing but rejections. So he became a chemist at the University of Cincinnati, and within ten years he’d created a compound that helped reduce itchy allergic reactions. He called it Benadryl. After the oral medication became available without a prescription in the 1980s, Benadryl began to also be sold as an anti-itch cream. (It won in both categories.)

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Kind Nutrition Bar
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Nutrition bar: Kind

The glucose is non-GMO, the 20-plus flavors offer abundant variety, and the grains (such as amaranth, buckwheat, and sorghum) are unrefined and packed with protein.

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Coppertone sun protection
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Sun protection: Coppertone

World War II airman Benjamin Green used veterinary petroleum to keep from getting sunburned while on duty. After the war, he added cocoa butter and coconut oil to the mix and created Coppertone suntan lotion. (The SPF came later.)

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Robitussin
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Cough remedy: Robitussin

In Latin, the word tussis means “cough.” It’s the same root found in the word pertussis, aka whooping cough.

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Tums antacid
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Antacid: Tums

When St. Louis pharmacist James Howe devised a mint-flavored calcium carbonate pill to quiet a patient’s indigestion in the 1920s, he had an extra incentive—the patient was his wife.

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Cheerios cereal
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Healthy cereal: Cheerios

Most nutritionists say that when it comes to two key factors—more fiber, less sugar—the healthiest of all 18 Cheerios varieties is the original one.

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Culturelle probiotic
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Probiotic: Culturelle

There are dozens of strains of probiotics—aka “good” bacteria. LGG, the one in Culturelle, is among the few that can survive stomach acid and make its health-promoting way into the intestines. These are the probiotic brands nutritionists trust the most.

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Crest toothpaste
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Toothpaste: Crest

Little-known fact: Crest will polish up the keys on your piano, too, whether they are made from ivory or plastic.

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Planters peanuts
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Nuts: Planters

Your heart loves nuts as much as you do! More than 80 percent of the fat in ­peanuts is monounsaturated and polyunsaturated, both of which can lower cholesterol and keep your blood vessels supple.

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Ensure Nutritional Drink
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Nutritional drink: Ensure

We lose up to 8 percent of our muscle mass each decade after age 40. Last year, Ensure introduced its Max Protein shake, with 30 grams of protein, for people 45 and older.

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One-Touch Blood-Glucose Monitor
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Blood-glucose monitor: OneTouch

In 1850, diabetics tested their blood sugar by adding a drop of urine to sheep’s wool that had been doused with a chemical that turned black in the presence of sugar. OneTouch meters use a drop of blood and return the precise glucose level within five seconds.

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Purina healthy pet food
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Healthy pet food: Purina

healthy pet food Purina has always been known for its healthy pet food—it’s what Admiral Richard E. Byrd fed his sled dogs on his 1933 Antarctic expedition. Today, Beneful, Purina’s preservative-free line of food, comes in flavors such as beef, potato, and green bean.

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Aleve joint-pain relief
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Joint-pain relief: Aleve

Aleve was the first over-the-counter medication to provide 12‑hour pain relief in a single dose. It is also available in a contoured bottle with a cushioned cap for easier gripping.

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Centrum multivitamin
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Multivitamin: Centrum

Have difficulty swallowing pills but feel silly chewing a gummy? In 2015, Centrum introduced a multivitamin in a mint form, called VitaMints. They contain 18 vitamins and micronutrients. These are the other vitamin brands that doctors trust the most.

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Chapstick
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Lip care: Chapstick

The Egyptians used beeswax. A 19th-century book, The American Frugal Housewife, suggested earwax! So Charles Browne Fleet didn’t invent lip balm. But in the 1890s, he combined wax with petroleum jelly, camphor, and aromatic oils, and his ChapStick is still with us today. (As is Fleet’s other famous health aid: the Fleet enema.)

ChapStick’s packaging is almost as ingenious as its ingredients. The signature tube, largely unchanged after more than 100 years, can slip into any pocket or purse. (It was so inconspicuous that E. Howard Hunt hid mini microphones in hollowed-out ChapStick tubes during Watergate.) Convenient, but not addictive, as some Internet rumors insist. But don’t lick your lips before applying it—saliva is made to break down food, not moisturize.

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Weight Watchers
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Weight-loss system: Weight Watchers

In a world that’s overstuffed with fad diets, Weight Watchers is like the friend that never lets you down. Founded by New York housewife Jean Nidetch in 1963, it is now ranked number one (out of 40 programs) for overall weight loss and was number five for healthy eating last year, according to U.S. News and World Report. WW (its slimmed-down name, as of 2018) is known for a “points” program designed to help participants track how much they are eating. But the ingenuity of Weight Watchers has always been its emphasis on support: going to meetings (or going online) to talk about weight and nutrition and to cheer on fellow Watchers. Oprah Winfrey swears by it. In fact, she is a spokesperson and a major stock owner.

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Walgreens
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

National pharmacy & drugstore: Walgreens

Not to be rude, but 240,000 Americans would be out of work if not for Charles R. Walgreen’s middle finger. As a teenager in Dixon, Illinois, in the 1890s, Walgreen worked in a shoe factory. One day, his hand got caught in a stitching machine, severing the top joint of his middle finger and ending his hoped-for career in sports. The doctor treating young Charles proposed an alternative path: Why not try pharmacy? Walgreen’s first job as a pharmacist’s apprentice paid $4 a week and ended with his getting fired (he forgot to shovel the snow out front). He opened his own pharmacy in 1901 (someone else could shovel!) and by 1929 operated 397 stores. Today, Walgreens is the second-largest U.S. pharmacy chain after CVS and fills more than 1.1 billion prescriptions a year.

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Clorox disinfecting wipes
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Disinfecting wipes: Clorox

Three years before the iconic ­Hollywood sign made its debut, the big name in California was Clorox. In 1920, the American cleaning giant (then known as the Electro-Alkaline Company) erected a massive billboard over San Francisco to tout its signature liquid bleach to the daily ferry commuters. Residents on the other side of the bay received a different kind of welcome. Annie Murray, the wife of the company’s first general manager, insisted on handing out free samples of the newfangled cleaner to housewives visiting her family’s grocery store in Oakland. You might say that Clorox still focuses on the personal touch, albeit in a somewhat different form. The Guardian estimates that the world uses about 14,000 disinfecting wet wipes every second, and according to Amazon, Clorox is the bestseller.

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Trusted Brands
Holly Wales for Reader's Digest

Trust Factors

Identifying America’s go-to products was only one goal of this year’s Reader’s Digest Trusted Brands survey of 3,500 representative consumers, conducted by the national polling firm Ipsos. We also wanted to know what influenced buying decisions, and some of the results were surprising. For instance, price didn’t generally affect trust. Only 10 percent of people said that an unusually low price would make them distrust a health-care product, and only 11 percent said they distrusted generics. Positive online reviews spoke to many people: 45 percent of those looking for a weight-loss system said that they put significant faith in them. Overall, the biggest factor driving trust was whether a product had worked in the past—63 percent of people cited that factor, followed by 54 percent who looked at the brand’s overall reputation. On the other hand, only 6 percent of consumers said their trust was affected by a claim of being “new” or “improved,” the lowest factor on our list.

To get a glimpse of all the winning brands from every year starting in 2015, check out the full list of Reader’s Digest’s Trusted Brands.

Reader's Digest
Originally Published in Reader's Digest