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  • GM Issues Third Massive Recall for Alleged Defective Power Steering
    Apr-1-14 Detroit, MI Further to the massive GM recalls involving alleged defects in air bag deployment and ignition switches, General Motors has now issued a third large recall involving more than 1.3 million vehicles in the US and 145,700 in Canada that may experience a sudden loss of electric power steering assist. In a statement, the automaker notes...
  • Children’s Activities Linked to Neck Injuries
    Mar-16-14 Phoenix, AZ Parents do everything they can to protect their children from back and neck injuries , but even regular activities can put them at a risk of serious injury. Regardless of the inherent risk of some activities - such as skiing or playing sports - if a person or organization’s negligence causes a back or neck injury, then a lawsuit could...
  • Did Cutting-Edge Stryker Process Cut Plaintiff the Wrong Way?
    Dec-22-13 Lafayette, LA One could understand Ouita Corley’s frustration with her knee replacement surgery, an operation that has been performed hundreds of thousands of times. But what sets Corley apart from other knee replacement patients, is the use of Stryker ShapeMatch Cutting Guide in her procedure. The device has since been recalled, and Corley now serve...
  • Following Suit: Transvaginal Mesh Lawsuit Updates
    Nov-26-13 Some 35,000 transvaginal mesh lawsuits filed against the device manufacturers allege the products are defective and have resulted in severe health issues, ranging from pain during sex, to erosion of vaginal tissue, infection, and even death. The mesh is surgically implanted for treatment of pelvic organ prolapse (POP) or urinary incontinence. How...
  • Massive Call Center Lawsuit Granted Conditional Status As Class Action
    Oct-18-13 Minneapolis, MN The apparent skirting of overtime pay laws that appears as work performed off the clock has rarely seen a bigger challenge than that of plaintiffs who have launched a class-action lawsuit against one of the nation’s leading call centers. According to various legal briefs, there could be as many as 51,021 potential class members. ...
  • Families Responsible for Ensuring Safety of Loved Ones at Care Homes
    Oct-16-13 Los Angeles, CA When it comes to caring for loved ones live in care centers and nursing homes, it could be up to the families to ensure the residents are safe and not the victims of care center abuse . That is one conclusion that could be drawn from a recent report on care home abuse and care home negligence conducted by The Center for Investigative Rep...
  • Lawsuit Updates: The Latest on Lipitor & Crestor
    Oct-9-13 A mounting number of Lipitor diabetes lawsuits have been filed against Pfizer, the maker of the medication. Lipitor, also known generically as atorvastatin, is a member of the statin class of medications used to reduce blood levels of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, or “bad” cholesterol, a contributing factor in heart disease...
  • Surgeon’s View: What to Consider Before Minimally Invasive Robotic Surgery
    Oct-4-13 Park Ridge, IL Much has been made about the impact robotic surgery has had on the medical profession, and subsequent impact to patients. Reports of operating room injuries related to the use of the da Vinci surgical robot have fostered headlines and triggered debate over traditional surgery v. a robot-assisted procedure with surgeons operating from a highl...
  • Fire, Fire Everywhere
    Sep-13-13 San Diego, CA A wildfire could be coming to a neighborhood near you. Better get ready. Last month, The National Interagency Fire Center, headquartered in Boise, Idaho, put the nation on high alert for the fifth time in 10 years. A Preparedness Level 5, or PL-5, means that there are so many fires burning in so many regions of the country that firefig...
  • GranuFlo Recall: When Safety Slips through the Cracks
    Sep-3-13 Washington, DC If 2012 was a watershed year with regard to the GranuFlo recall and concern over the actions (or lack thereof) of Fresenius Medical Care, then the month of March has proven to be a watershed month spanning two years, 2012 and 2013. It was in March 2012 when the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) first became aware of issues involvi...
  • Transvaginal Mesh Lawsuits
    Aug-31-13 Tens of thousands of transvaginal mesh (TVM) lawsuits have been filed against the makers of TVM devices. To date, two lawsuits pending against C.R. Bard Inc, the manufacturer of Avaulta, Faslata, Pelvicol and PelviSoft products have been settled. In March 2013, an $11 million verdict was rendered for the Plaintiff in the first Ethicon trial (In re...
  • $2M Awarded in First Federal Transvaginal Mesh Injury Lawsuit
    Aug-21-13 Atlanta, GA A jury hearing the first transvaginal mesh personal injury lawsuit has awarded the plaintiff $2 million in damages. In her lawsuit, Donna Cisson alleges that the mesh, one of the line of Avaulta transvaginal mesh products made by C.R. Bard Inc, which she had surgically implanted, caused her bleeding and pain. The Avaulta transvaginal...
  • 2011 a Watershed Year for Actos and Bladder Cancer
    Aug-14-13 Washington, DC With the first Actos lawsuit in the federal Actos litigation expected to go to trial in the New Year, Actos watchers are still looking in their rear-view mirrors to the bellwether case involving plaintiff Jack Cooper ( Cooper v. Takeda Pharmaceuticals America Inc., CGC-12-518535, California Superior Court Los Angeles), which was tossed...
  • Januvia Safety Risks: Mixed Messages from FDA and Researchers
    Aug-4-13 Washington, DC Although a new study has linked Merck’s Januvia with pancreatitis, the FDA is not changing Januvia’s labeling about potential safety risks - for now. Meanwhile, the agency says a review is “ongoing” as Januvia pancreatitis and data are being collected. Despite a 2011 study from UCLA that showed increased rates...
  • Amusement Park Ride Accidents Require Quick Action and Evidence
    Jun-14-13 Riverview, FL A day at an amusement park can go bad very quickly. A 2013 report by the Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, found that 20 children a day were treated at an emergency ward somewhere in the U.S. for injuries related to an amusement park-type ride. The number of injuries in the study doesn’t surprise Florida att...
  • Signs of Trouble for Incivek from the Day of Approval
    Mar-7-13 Washington, DC It was in May, 2011 that Vertex Pharmaceuticals won approval from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for Incivek, a promising new drug to fight hepatitis C to be used in combination with two other drugs. According to The New York Times (5/23/11), Incivek was expected to finally allow Vertex to be profitable after 22 years of operati...
  • Pfizer to Settle 80 Percent of Chantix Lawsuits
    Mar-5-13 Washington, DC More than 80 percent of the 2,700 federal and state Chantix lawsuits facing Pfizer look as if they could be settled. Pfizer, the maker of the controversial smoking cessation drug known generically as varenicline, faces a raft of lawsuits alleging Chantix causes suicide, suicide attempts and other psychiatric disturbances. In order t...
  • Does Your Doctor Know That Topamax Is Linked to Birth Defects?
    Feb-26-13 Washington, DC Chances are, you trust your doctor to provide the best possible treatment for whatever ails you. And you likely don’t question your doctor when he or she prescribes medications for that ailment. However, doctors have the difficult and time-consuming task of familiarizing themselves with drug contraindications. This writer, for one, ask...
  • Wisconsin Plaintiffs Allege Newborn Daughter Succumbed to SSRI Birth Defects
    Feb-6-13 Winnebago County, WI An SSRI birth defects lawsuit filed at the start of the year in US District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania alleges that the Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressant the mother continued to take while pregnant resulted in the death of a child. In this case, the SSRI lawsuit centers on the Zolof...
  • New Diabetes Drug May Compete with Januvia
    Feb-2-13 Washington, DC The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved a new diabetes drug that is expected to compete with Januvia for a share of the diabetes medication market. Although the drug is believed to have heart risks, it is not yet known if the drug’s risks are similar to Januvia side effects. Some studies have suggested a link between...
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