May 12, 2006.
By Evelyn Pringle*
In January 2006, the FDA announced the Bush administration's latest gift to
Big Pharma in a statement that said people who believe they have been
injured by drugs approved by the FDA should not be allowed to sue drug
companies in state courts.
"We think that if your company complies with the FDA processes, if you bring
forward the benefits and risks of your drug, and let your information be
judged through a process with highly trained scientists, you should not be
second-guessed by state courts that don't have the same scientific
knowledge," said Scott Gottlieb, the FDA's deputy commissioner for medical
and scientific affairs.
To soften the blow, the agency's claim of federal preemption was included as
a preamble to the long sought after new drug labeling guidelines. In
response to the FDA's statement, Senator Edward Kennedy (D-MA) issued a
statement of his own that said: "It's a typical abuse by the Bush
Administration -- take a regulation to improve the information that doctors
and patients receive about prescription drugs and turn it into a protection
against liability for the drug industry."
The ploy was also readily recognized by state lawmakers and trial lawyers as
another ploy to reduce the public's ability to hold Big Pharma accountable.
"Eliminating the rights of individuals to hold negligent drug companies
accountable puts patients in even more danger than they already are in from
drug company executives that put profits before safety," said Ken Suggs,
president of the Association of Trial Lawyers of America.
"The fact that the drug industry can get the FDA to rewrite the rules so
that CEOs can escape accountability for putting dangerous and deadly drugs
on the market is the scariest example yet of how much control these big
corporations have over our political process," Mr Suggs told the Washington
Post.
According to Attorney Mark Labaton, a partner at the firm Kreindler &
Kreindler, LLP, with offices in New York and LA, "the Administration's
recent efforts to misuse federal rulemaking in the pharmaceutical and other
areas to eviserate consumer rights is a big step backward."
"The new FDA rules to limit consumers' rights," he says, "are part and
parcel of a larger effort to deny persons injured by unsafe products -- be
they drugs, cigarettes or automobiles -- any form of redress."
"Clearly," Mr Labaton notes, "this Administration and its supporters want to
slam the courthouse doors on working men and women injured by unsafe
products.
He says its ironic that "an Administrative that calls itself "compassionate"
and "conservative" consistently turns its back on "limited government" and
"states rights" when it comes to protecting the rights of seriously injured
consumers."
Upon learning of the FDA's power grab, the National Conference of State
Legislatures, a bipartisan group that represents state lawmakers, accused
the FDA of trying to seize authority that it did not have. The organization
bases its opposition, in part on the following:
"FDA has usurped the authority of Congress, state legislatures and state
courts. There is no statutory authority in the FDCA for FDA to preempt state
product liability laws as they relate to prescription drugs.
"Instead of seeking valid congressional authority, unelected agency
officials are seeking to preempt state product liability laws by writing
this preemption into a final rule, thereby undermining state policy and
judicial decision made in this area.
"State tort laws and civil justice systems serve as an important check on
federal standards. Our civil justice system establishes a duty of care that
protects citizens when the federal government is too slow to act or when
federal standards are insufficient. States have the ability to achieve
greater protections for their citizens through successful product liability
lawsuits."
In an earlier gift delivered to Big Pharma in December 2005, Republican
leaders, and specifically Senator Bill Frist (R-TN), attached protective
provisions to a Department of Defense appropriations report that gave the
industry "unprecedented immunity," according to Democratic lawmakers who
described the underhanded move as follows:
"Republican leaders added provisions to the conference report after cutting
a back-room deal in the middle of the night. The conference report grants
sweeping immunity to drug companies for injuries caused by vaccines and
drugs and for the administration of those vaccines and drugs, even if they
are made with flagrant disregard for basic safety precautions.
"Moreover, the compensation program is a sham, leaving people who become
injured from a drug or vaccine without recourse."
Since 2002, Senator Frist had tried numerous times to insert this rider in
Homeland Security Bills after thousands of lawsuits were filed by parents
who believe the mercury-based preservative thimerosal, contained in
childhood vaccines until recently, caused autism and other neurological
disorders in their kids.
The rider could save Big Pharma hundreds of millions, if not billions of
dollars.
The latest revelation on this little stunt came on May 8, 2006 when the
Tennessean reported that vaccine industry officials helped shape legislation
behind the scenes that Frist secretly amended into a bill, according to
e-mails obtained by Pubic Citizen, a public advocacy group.
The industry group, called the Biotechnology Industry Organization, wanted
the vaccine liability language in the bill, the e-mails proves.
"At Senator Frist's staff's request, this morning, BIO (Tom and I)
participated in a meeting with three other industry representatives (Sanofi
and an outside counsel who works for both Pfizer and Roche, I believe),
administration staff (HHS, DoJ and WH Leg Affairs), and Liz Hall to further
discuss liability," BIO official Dave Boyer wrote in a November e-mail
obtained by Public Citizen.
Other E-mails and documents show that BIO met privately with Frist's staff
and the White House to figure out ways to give drug makers protection from
people injured by vaccines.
"The lack of any restriction on jury trial is problematic," the BIO analysis
said. "Where injured parties have no other avenue for relief, juries are
likely to find ways to award damages."
In another e-mail, Boyer described a meeting in which Karl Rove said it was
"important to the President that a bill move this year," and said "they had
invited industry to discuss what they understood to be a few key remaining
points" of contention.
Republicans members of Congress had tried to on several occasions to enact
similar legislation of its own, but with voters already so angry over
soaring drug costs, they finally had to back off.
With less than 3 years left in office, and the Democrats positioned to take
over Congress in the fall elections, Bush had to find a way to repay Big
Pharma so he came up with the bright idea to utilize the FDA and kill 2
birds with one stone.
This route would spare Republicans the task of trying to pass pro-industry
legislation in an election year and still reward Big Pharma for the more
than $80 million that Republicans received from drug makers over the past
decade.
Since 2000, the top drug corporations, their trade group, and their
employees gave more than $10 million to 527 organizations, tax-exempt
political committees which operate in the grey area between federal and
state campaign finance laws, according to Drug Lobby Second to None, July 7,
2005, M. Asif Ismail.
Nearly $87 million of the contributions went to federal politicians, with
almost 69% going to Republicans. Top recipients include Bush, with upwards
of $1.5 million, and members who sit on committees that have jurisdiction
over pharmaceutical issues, reports Drug Lobby Second to None.
During Bush's campaigns, 21 pharmaceutical industry executives and lobbyists
achieved "Ranger" or "Pioneer" status, which means they raised at least
$200,000 or $100,000, respectively, during the 2000 or 2004 campaigns.
According to Public Citizen, the group included 5 executives from brand-name
drug companies, 6 officials from HMOs, the CEO of a pharmacy services
company that runs a PBM, the head of a direct-mail pharmacy, and 8
Washington lobbyists who represent drug companies and HMOs.
Frist is never shy when it comes to calling in markers from drug companies.
In November 2004, when he wanted to take a victory tour celebrating the
newly elected Republican senators, "A Gulfstream corporate jet owned by drug
maker Schering-Plough was ready to zip the Senate majority leader to stops
in Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas," according to the April 25, 2005 USA
Today
Frist's PAC reimbursed Schering $10,809, the equivalent of a commercial
first-class fare, but that was only a fraction of the cost of a charter
flight, which would have cost 3 times that much. Besides, the cost was
almost a wash because Schering had donated $10,000 to Frist's committee in
2003-04, according to USA Today.
Its also worth pointing out that Big Pharma was the largest contributor to
the National Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee while Frist chaired
the Committee.
The ever-growing number of lawsuits in state courts has created a nagging
fear in drug makers. Local juries and elected judges in state courts are
much more likely to go against drug giants than juries and appointed judges
in federal courts which is a one of the main reasons why Big Pharma wants
all cases moved to federal courts.
Vioxx set off the industry's worst nightmare when users or their heirs began
filing lawsuits all over the US. According to the January 24, 2006,
Associated Press, Merck currently faces 9,200 Vioxx lawsuits, with about
4,050 in federal courts and the rest in state courts.
But Vioxx by far is not the only worry for Big Pharma. These days, every
major drug company has litigation problems involving one or more
FDA-approved products and a few prominent law firms have taken up the battle
for plaintiff's in state courts.
For instance, since 1990, the Los Angeles based Baum Hedlund Law Firm has
been handling SSRI (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor) suicide/violence
cases and served on the Plaintiffs' Steering Committee in the first
SSRI-suicide litigation involving Prozac, the first SSRI approved by the
FDA.
Baum Hedlund partner, Karen Barth Menzies, has been litigating claims
involving injuries stemming from SSRIs such as Prozac, Paxil, Zoloft and,
more recently, Lexapro/Celexa, for over a decade.
She heads a team of attorneys, who have successfully defeated Pfizer's and
the FDA's preemption arguments in a number of cases, including Motus v
Pfizer and Witczak v Pfizer.
In addition to her court activities, Ms Menzies has testified about the |