Baxter faces numerous lawsuits over tainted heparin scandal

January 19th, 2010 by Jennifer Walker-Journey

blood cells 100x100As many as 300 product-liability lawsuits may be filed in the Illinois state court against drug maker Inc., by people injured by or families who lost loved ones to contaminated batches of the heparin. Per a judge’s order last year, attorneys are working to convert an aggregate lawsuit to individual claims against the Deerfield, Illinois-based drug company.

The complaints accuse Baxter and its supplier, Scientific Protein Laboratories LLC, of negligence, alleging Baxter’s heparin was unsafe for the intended use. The lawsuits seek money damages.

The nightmare began in late 2007, as reports of serious allergic reactions and deaths following use of Baxter’s began mounting. By March 2008, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a major recall of . At the time, Baxter supplied about 50 percent of to the U.S. As Baxter began pulling its , investigations into the source of the contaminant focused on ’s plant. The culprit was identified as over-sulfated chondroitin sulfate, or , a man-made chemical that mimics .

While Baxter was at fault for distributing the tainted , critical eyes fell on the FDA for not properly inspecting foreign drug manufacturing plants. The agency admitted it was simply too understaffed to properly inspect most of the foreign food and drug manufacturing plants. The FDA soon after received funding to open overseas field offices, the first three of which were opened in .

The stricter inspections hardly console the victims and families of victims who suffered or died from the contaminated . The FDA reports that as many as 395 deaths and 785 reports of serious injury were associated with the contaminated heparin.

Source: Bloomberg

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