If You Purchased a Breast Pump Marketed as “Hospital Strength/Grade” or “Quiet,” We Want to Hear From You
What Is This About? You may be due compensation.
These terms can strongly influence purchasing decisions — especially for new mothers relying on accurate performance claims during a medically and emotionally critical time.
However:
These Breast Pumps are not Hospital Strength or Grade and do not offer the same level of performance.
“Quiet” and “virtually silent” claims may imply measurable acoustic superiority without clear standards or disclosures.
If these representations influenced your purchase, you may have legal rights.
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Why It Matters
Breast pumps are not casual purchases. They are:
- Medical-adjacent devices relied upon for infant nutrition
- Often covered by insurance under federal law
- Used by working mothers seeking discretion and performance
When products are marketed using medical-sounding or performance-driven language, consumers are entitled to accurate and substantiated claims.
Accountability in marketing helps ensure families can make informed decisions.
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Who May Qualify
You may qualify if:
You purchased a breast pump advertised as “hospital strength, or hospital grade,” “hospital performance,” or similar language
The product was marketed as “quiet,” “whisper quiet,” or “virtually silent”
You relied on these claims in deciding to purchase
You experienced performance or noise levels inconsistent with those representations
How It Works
- Complete a short intake form
- Our legal team will review your information
- If appropriate, we will contact you to discuss potential next steps
There is no obligation to proceed.
About Our Firm
We investigate misleading performance of medical devices and medical adjacent marketing claims under federal and state consumer protection laws.
Our goal is to ensure companies substantiate the representations they make to consumers — especially when those claims affect health-related purchasing decisions.