Malaise in Haleon Us Holdings Llc Drugs

23 drug(s) with this reaction

21,634 total reports

Overview

Malaise has been reported as an adverse reaction across 23 drug(s) manufactured by Haleon Us Holdings Llc in the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) database. A combined total of 21,634 adverse event reports mention malaise in connection with Haleon Us Holdings Llc products.

This page provides a breakdown of which Haleon Us Holdings Llc drugs are most commonly associated with malaise, along with report counts and links to detailed safety analyses for each medication. Understanding which drugs from a single manufacturer share a common adverse reaction can help patients and healthcare providers identify potential class-wide safety patterns.

Haleon Us Holdings Llc Drugs Reporting Malaise

The following Haleon Us Holdings Llc drugs have malaise listed in their FDA adverse event reports, sorted by report count:

Other Reactions Reported for Haleon Us Holdings Llc Drugs

In addition to malaise, the following adverse reactions have been reported across Haleon Us Holdings Llc's drug portfolio:

COVID 19DISEASE RECURRENCEDRUG INEFFECTIVEPRODUCT USE IN UNAPPROVED INDICATIONDRUG EFFECTIVE FOR UNAPPROVED INDICATIONHEADACHENAUSEAFATIGUEDIZZINESSMIGRAINEPAINVOMITINGABDOMINAL PAIN UPPERINSOMNIAOVERDOSEINCORRECT DOSE ADMINISTEREDDIARRHOEAFEELING ABNORMALABDOMINAL DISCOMFORTOFF LABEL USE

Frequently Asked Questions

Which Haleon Us Holdings Llc drugs cause Malaise?

23 drug(s) manufactured by Haleon Us Holdings Llc have malaise listed in their FDA adverse event reports: DICLOFENAC SODIUM, CALCIUM CARBONATE, FLUTICASONE PROPIONATE, NICOTINE, NICOTINE POLACRILEX, and others.

How many Malaise reports are there for Haleon Us Holdings Llc drugs?

There are a combined 21,634 reports of malaise across 23 Haleon Us Holdings Llc drug(s) in the FDA adverse event database.

Related Pages

All Haleon Us Holdings Llc DrugsAll Drugs Causing Malaise
Disclaimer: This analysis is based on FDA adverse event reports and is for informational purposes only. Reports do not prove causation. Always consult your healthcare provider.