Earlier this week, we spoke of the impending birth of our soon-to-be standard poodle puppy. We are delighted to report that the puppies are being born as we type this! Eight are expected (e-mail us and we will send you a cool x-ray that shows all eight in utero – count the spines and
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Confident Learned Intermediaries Defeat Warning Causation
Confident prescribing physicians and implanting surgeons are the best “learned” intermediaries. They’re experienced at what they do and aren’t intimidated by plaintiffs’ counsel and their threats of malpractice claims if they don’t testify the way plaintiffs want them to. Confident learned intermediaries stand by their medical decisions. Thus a confident learned intermediary’s testimony will defeat causation as a matter of law by stating that, notwithstanding a poor result, the treatment provided was standard of care, and even in hindsight they would not do anything different. Because we encountered many stand up learned intermediary surgeons in the Bone Screw litigation, several of the relatively early decisions from the 1999-2001 timeframe are Bone Screw cases.
Continue Reading Confident Learned Intermediaries Defeat Warning Causation
Unimpressed Learned Intermediaries Defeat Warning Causation
There’s a reason why prescribing physicians and implanting surgeons are called “learned” intermediaries. The law presumes that licensed doctors know what they are doing. That means that prescribers can make risk/benefit analyses to determine what prescription drugs or medical devices their patients need. As part of that process, such physicians necessarily also evaluate what risks they should tell – and not tell − their patients.
One consequence of a physician’s presumed medical competence is that a learned intermediary is within his/her rights to disregard a manufacturer’s warning altogether, to decide that a particular risk was not severe enough to make a difference, or to conclude that such a risk did not exist or was not material in the context of a particular patient’s medical needs. In all of these situations, the prescriber’s independent evaluation of what risks to credit, which to ignore, and which to omit in counseling patients breaks the causal chain of , entitling a manufacturer defendant to judgment on a warning claim concerning such risks. This scenario was the “third hypothetical” in our “Learned Intermediary Rule 201” post back in 2008.Continue Reading Unimpressed Learned Intermediaries Defeat Warning Causation
Puzzling Reversal Of A Defense Verdict Over The Admission Of Deposition Testimony
Every once in a while, we encounter a decision that is so obviously wrong that we have to pause and go back to the basics to make sure we did not miss something in our initial read. This dynamic is something like reading the troubleshooting instructions that you might get when you buy a new…
Don’t Overlook “I Don’t Recall” Testimony
Today’s post is not about something cutting edge or controversial. It’s a don’t lose sight of the basics kind of post. Plaintiff bears the burden of proof on causation. In a prescription drug failure to warn case, that means plaintiff must demonstrate that a different warning would have changed whether the drug would have been…
The Ten Best Prescription Drug/Medical Device Decisions of 2021
2021 is almost over. Before 2021 – indeed, before the last half of 2021 – practically nobody other than stargazers had ever heard of “omicron,” unless someone was part of some fraternity or sorority. Now everybody has. The omicron viral variant demonstrates, once again in real time (as had the delta variant before it)…
Fascinating Implications of Legal Malpractice Claims in Zoster MDL
Here’s something we’ve never seen before in a mass tort MDL. In In re Zostavax (Zoster Vaccine Live) Products Liability Litigation, 2021 WL 3375941 (E.D. Pa. Aug. 3, 2021), two former MDL plaintiffs who had suffered summary judgment against their claims were allowed to rejoin the MDL – to assert legal malpractice claims against…
No Heeding Presumption (and No Warnings Causation) in Eastern District of Wisconsin Mesh Case
We understand the value of branching out and trying new things. Recently, a close companion prevailed upon us to try calamari (thumbs down). We signed up for a Zoom acting class during the pandemic. And we are seriously considering a “new” hair color, to take advantage of the natural phenomenon that has occurred during the…
Guest Post − Building A Better Bellwether
Today’s guest post is by the Reed Smith team of Shana E. Russo, Jennifer A. Eppensteiner, and Kathy I. Oviedo. It is about multi-district litigation (“MDL”) practice, and specifically, compares and contrasts various ways of selecting plaintiffs for possible bellwether trials. It also useful in providing links to orders entered in a…
Tort Pandemic Countermeasures − The Ten Best Prescription Drug/Medical Device Decisions of 2020
With 2020 mercifully coming to an end, it is once again time for the Drug & Device Law Blog’s top ten decisions of the year. In keeping with COVID-19’s dominance of 2020, we present our top ten in the context of countermeasures against another social ill – the tort pandemic raging across much of the…