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Originally posted by halfmask
I have always been paranoid of the pharmaceutical companies and their products, but now its justified. I will be avoiding as much medication as I can.
Originally posted by TKDRL
reply to post by Bluesma
Interesting point. I know it is like that for a whole lot of non brand name products, the same company makes the product, yet it doesn't have the brand and is suddenly worth half the price ..... It wouldn't surprise me to see the same practice in the pharm industry.
Originally posted by TheIceQueen
I looked it up, and yup it's for real. Wow, just wow.. How damn RIDICULOUS.
So, the next time a drug company makes an error of some sort and a bad 'batch' of medication comes out (or something of the sort) and a person (or multiple people) experience irreversible damage to their bodies due to this, they can't sue.. Wow.
Originally posted by TheIceQueen
I looked it up, and yup it's for real. Wow, just wow.. How damn RIDICULOUS.
So, the next time a drug company makes an error of some sort and a bad 'batch' of medication comes out (or something of the sort) and a person (or multiple people) experience irreversible damage to their bodies due to this, they can't sue.. Wow.
Originally posted by kaylaluv
Originally posted by TheIceQueen
I looked it up, and yup it's for real. Wow, just wow.. How damn RIDICULOUS.
So, the next time a drug company makes an error of some sort and a bad 'batch' of medication comes out (or something of the sort) and a person (or multiple people) experience irreversible damage to their bodies due to this, they can't sue.. Wow.
That's not what the ruling says at all. It says that if the generic company is making the drug exactly the same as the original company (which was approved by the FDA), then the generic company is not the one liable if the drug is causing problems. In this particular case, there was even a warning of this rare, but possible side-effect on the drug box. There are many, many, many people who have taken this drug (generic AND brand name) who had no major side-effect at all.edit on 11-7-2013 by kaylaluv because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by WhiteAlice
Pretty disturbing outcome and I wholeheartedly agree with Sotomayer's dissenting opinion where she states that they are providing a loophole to escape liability. If you make a product that, through appropriate use, causes grievous harm, you should be responsible. Period. At least that's what I learned when I took business law.
PS. I saw nothing in the majority opinion that relied upon the drug's generic status. The manufacturer was Mutual.
Mutual was unable to change sulindac’s composition as a matter of both federal law and basic chemistry, New Hampshire’s design-defect cause of action effectively required Mutual to change sulindac’s labeling to provide stronger warnings. But, as this Court recognized just two Terms ago in PLIVA, Inc. v. Mensing, 564 U. S. ___ (2011), federal law prohibits generic drug manufacturers from independently changing their drugs’ labels. Accordingly, state law imposed a duty on Mutual not to comply with federal law.
Originally posted by CaticusMaximus
5 to 4, eh? Makes it easy to tell which 5 judges are in the back pockets of wallstreet and big money.
Wonder how much each of them were bribed for....
I think at this point, the corruption in America is nearing absolute completion. I just see no other alternate scenario occurring here.
Fascism isnt coming.
Its here.
edit on 7/9/2013 by CaticusMaximus because: grammar