Guest guest Posted January 7, 2005 Report Share Posted January 7, 2005 atracyphd2 Fri, 7 Jan 2005 09:45:47 EST [drugawareness] LA TIMES-Bush: End 'Frivolous' Lawsuits From the LA Times article found below we read: " Doctors, hospitals, drug makers and other manufacturers who want to limit litigation costs are lining up against the trial attorneys who represent plaintiffs in personal injury cases. " Bush prodded lawmakers to take action this year , , , " The legislation Bush favors would limit damages in malpractice cases, restrict class action lawsuits and curb asbestos-related litigation. " White House officials said the president wanted the new Congress to tackle the malpractice measure before taking up other top social legislative priorities , , , [to] place a $250,000 ceiling on awards for pain and suffering and other non-economic damages. A number of states, including California, have enacted such caps. " Let me point out that what we have just learned about Prozac producing such a high rate of suicide would never have seen the light of day had it not been for what Bush is referring to here as a " frivolous " lawsuit. PLEASE let your local political leaders know that you oppose this move by President Bush!! If this happens there will be absolutely NO checks and balances of any kind left for one of these companies who kill in order to make a buck if they limit these suits. Let me explain. These wrongful death suits are ALL we have as recourse against these mass murderers who kill using pharmaceutical drugs rather than bullets - the death toll as of a decade ago was already higher than if we were to have a 9/11 tragedy every week in America alone. With the limit Bush is suggesting of $250,000 there is not an attorney in the country who could afford to take a case to court. It costs hundreds of thousands of dollars to gather all of the data in preparing to take a case to court. Why? Because you have to spend months coming through rooms filled with boxes of papers to find the evidence necessary to take one of these cases to court. This type of evidence is what has just given the British Medical Journal the information they needed to warn the world about the huge increase in suicide caused by Prozac. Without someone going through reams upon reams of paper to find that information for the Wesbecker wrongful death case, the world would never have known. Let me make a point here. If any one of us goes out after premeditating a murder and kills someone it is clear that we will spend the rest of our lives behind bars or get the death penalty. But these companies are not held accountable in the same way when they market drugs that they know will kill the patients who take them. For instance: In the Wesbecker mass murder/sucide case the plaintiffs had just obtained permission from Judge Potter to enter a particular piece of evidence on a Lilly drug called Oraflex that the FDA had recently pulled from the market. The evidence was never presented because at that point in the case a recess was called. Lilly attorneys went into a room alone with the plaintiffs and as Judge Potter learned two years later LOTS of money ($50 Million is what has been estimated) changed hands and a settlement was made. In the case of Oraflex, a drug used for arthritis pain, (This may sound like deja-vu in light of the recent ban on Vioxx and Celebrex, etc.) Lilly knew that the drug was killing patients in Europe, but neglected to mention that to the FDA when they gained approval in the US. After three months on the market there were reports of at least 139 deaths directly linked to Oraflex. (I say at least 139 because we know that not all reports are made to the FDA and that the real figure is generally estimated to be 10 to 100 times higher.) Because of that lack of disclosure leading to those deaths several Lilly officials were held accountable. In the mid 80's they were charge criminally with the 139 lives that were lost. They were found guilty and given the maximum sentence possible. No, not life in prison. No, not the death penalty. For knowingly killing at least 139 innocent victims the maximum sentence was a $20,000 fine. This small fine for a company, who was and still is, the largest manufacturer of diabetic products and was at the time of the Wesbecker case bringing in $7 Million a day on Prozac alone, is not only ridiculous, but unconscionable! As one man in a lecture I gave recently pointed out, that is less than $150.00 per life lost. Surely Scott Peterson would have been more than agreeable to paying a $300 fine and walking out of jail, as would anyone else facing the repercussions of a guilty verdict for murder. Now Bush is asking that we allow them to get away with these murders for even less?!! UNBELIEVABLE!! Ann Blake Tracy, Ph.D., Executive Director, International Coalition For Drug Awareness Website: www.drugawareness.org Author: Prozac: Panacea or Pandora? - Our Serotonin Nightmare & audio tape on safe withdrawal: " Help! I Can't Get Off My Antidepressant! " Order Number: 800-280-0730 http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-010505bush_lat,0,6501009.story\ ?coll=la-home-headlines Bush: End 'Frivolous' Lawsuits  Warren Vieth, Times Staff Writer COLLINSVILLE, Ill.  President Bush today demanded congressional action this year to rein in what he called " frivolous " lawsuits against doctors and hospitals, saying the time had come to impose federal restraints on a system traditionally left to the states. Taking his tort reform campaign to a southern Illinois county known as a hotbed of civil litigation, Bush said the prospect of big jury awards in medical malpractice cases was causing insurance rates to soar and doctors to leave their practices. " What's happening all across the country is that lawyers are filing baseless suits against doctors and hospitals….They know the medical liability system is tilted in their favor, " Bush told a group of medical professionals and business allies. " Medical liability reform is a national issue and it requires a national solution, " he said. Bush's broadside was the opening round in a legislative battle involving some of the nation's most powerful and well-financed interest groups. Doctors, hospitals, drug makers and other manufacturers who want to limit litigation costs are lining up against the trial attorneys who represent plaintiffs in personal injury cases. Bush prodded lawmakers to take action this year to address three facets of what he and his allies are presenting as a litigation crisis that the White House says costs the U.S. economy more than $230 billion a year. The legislation Bush favors would limit damages in malpractice cases, restrict class action lawsuits and curb asbestos-related litigation. White House officials said the president wanted the new Congress to tackle the malpractice measure before taking up other top social legislative priorities, among them restructuring Social Security and overhauling the tax code, but he faces considerable opposition in the Senate, where many members are attorneys and Republicans lack sufficient votes to cut off a filibuster. The malpractice legislation Bush supports would not limit the amount of damages for medical treatment and lost wages. It would, however, place a $250,000 ceiling on awards for pain and suffering and other non-economic damages. A number of states, including California, have enacted such caps. The president and his allies say the prospect of multimillion-dollar judgments is driving the malpractice insurance system into crisis. Opponents say caps disproportionately affect children, seniors and stay-at-home mothers who have little or no lost wages on which to base a malpractice award. " The value of a life should not be equal to the value of a paycheck, " said a full-page newspaper ad welcoming the president to southern Illinois but urging him to reverse course. A group allied with trial lawyers purchased the advertisement. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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