Wednesday, May 22, 2013





Court: Can generic makers be sued for drug flaws?


Last Modified: February 19. 2013 7:51PM
Story Tools
PrintPrint | E-MailEMail | SaveSave | Hear Generate QR Code QR
Send to Kindle


(AP) The Supreme Court will decide whether generic drug manufacturers can be held responsible in state courts for possible design defects that are in the brand-name medicine they are copying.


The high court on Friday agreed to hear an appeal from Philadelphia-based Mutual Pharmaceutical, manufacturer of the generic, anti-inflammatory drug sulindac.


Karen Bartlett was awarded $21.6 million after claiming a design defect in sulindac caused blindness and severe burning of her skin and mucus membranes. But Mutual says they shouldn't have to pay because they made sulindac exactly the same way as its brand-name equivalent, Clinoril, as required by federal law.


The court last year said generic manufacturers are not responsible for failing to warn consumers of possible side effects if they copy the exact warnings from their brand-name equivalents.


Associated Press


Comments
Commenting Guidelines
Poll

Search for New & Used Cars

Make 
Model
 
Used New All
 

Search Times Leader Classifieds to find just the home you want!

Search Times Leader Classifieds to find just what you need!

Search Pet Classifieds
Dogs Cats Other Animals



Social Media/RSS
Times Leader on Twitter
Times Leader on Youtube
Times Leader on Google+
The Times Leader on Tumblr
The Times Leader on Pinterest
Times Leader RSS Feeds