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Reforming Tort Law, 6.7 Million Dollars at a Time

Recently, the U.S. Supreme Court began hearing oral arguments in a case that could affect tort law nationwide.  Drug manufacturer Wyeth is appealing a Vermont Supreme Court decision, in which a jury awarded local musician Diana Levine $6.7 million in her claim against Wyeth for failing to provide sufficient warnings regarding the administration of the drug Phenergan by intravenous injection.  Levine developed gangrene in her arm after receiving the drug via intravenous injection; and as a result, her arm had to be amputated and her career was cut short. 

Wyeth asserts that because the FDA approved Phenergan and its warning label, patients such as Levine are preempted by federal law from bringing personal injury claims against it in state court.  According to the doctrine of preemption, federal regulation takes precedence over state laws, which can vary significantly across the country.

Levine certainly makes a sympathetic plaintiff, and several justices have expressed dismay that a drug used to treat a relatively minor ailment (nausea) would be administered when it could lead to such devastating consequences.  Furthermore, it seems the FDA had adequate warning of Phenargan’s dangers, given at least 20 people previously developed gangrene after receiving it, and drug giant Pfizer had already stopped administering anti-nausea drugs by intravenous injection after two amputations resulted. 

It should be noted, however, that Levine already sued – and received a substantial settlement – from the clinic which faultily administered the drug to her.  The case before the Supreme Court is not about compensating Levine; rather, it’s about federal preemption.  Some say that preemption in necessary, at the very least for public policy’s sake, and I agree.  It would be dangerous to allow juries, who generally lack the requisite medical background, to set safety standards for new drugs coming to market.  

Ultimately, permitting juries to determine each medication’s safety profile will bog down the medical system in wasteful litigation and may even dissuade drug manufacturers from making their medications available on the market.  Moreover, a lack of uniform regulations may lead drug manufacturers to incorporate under the laws of those states with the least stringent guidelines, allowing them to in effect bypass safety measures that would have been in place if federal regulations still governed nationwide.  Finally, if erratic drug safety laws aren’t scary enough, the outcome of this case could set precedent in many industries, for example affecting automobile safety standards. 

Instead of allowing juries to determine individual state safety standards, wouldn’t it be wiser to force federal regulators to improve their review procedures and tighten their standards?


Comments

  • gyi tsakalakis

    While I agree with the general principle that knowledgeable professionals with medical backgrounds should be setting state safety standards, the FDA hardly fits that role. As they have proven time and again, the FDA sets minimum safety and efficacy thresholds. Oversimplified, if the drug doesn’t kill you and is more than a sugar pill, it probably passes FDA muster. And that doesn’t even begin to address the problem of off-label marketing and uses.

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