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Flu Vaccine Preparedness
Press Kit | Drug Safety News
Proposed Legislation Protects Drug Company Profits Over Americans'
Health and Safety
A special interest giveaway that could prove deadly for the public.
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Rep. Dave Weldon, M.D.
"If [Americans] know that, should they have a side effect
[from a vaccine], they have absolutely no recourse, I think
it could undermine the ability of CDC to get the public to comply
with the vaccine program."
Related Information
Liability Concerns Are Not
Affecting Vaccine Production (Nov. 3)
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Legislation proposed in the U.S. House and Senate (S.1873 and H.R.
3970) protects drug companies without regard for the safety of the
American public. The bills include sweeping immunity that releases
drug companies from any and all accountability, even for gross negligence
and intentional misconduct.
The immunity proposals are unnnecessarily broad in scopeso
broad that they even apply to a wide-range of commercial drugs and
products that have nothing to do with a bioterrorism or a potential
pandemic. The immunity even applies to commercial drugs already on
the market.
Without a safety or compensation component, S. 1873 and H.R. 3970
ask the American public to trust the pharmaceutical industry to keep
them safe. And if that trust is broken, Americans are left with no
place to turn for a remedy: the bills limit all access to the court
system and fail to provide the American public with any compensation
system when they or their loved ones are injured or killed by a covered
countermeasure.
Under the bills, immunity is triggered if: 1) the Secretary of Health
and Human Services (HHS) declares an actual or potential public health
emergency and 2) the Secretary declares a drug, vaccine, or device
as a "countermeasure" or qualifying "pandemic or epidemic
product." Once this occurs, drug companies are virtually immune
from all liability.
Disturbing Facts About the Special Protections for Drug Companies
in Proposed Bioterror and Pandemic Preparedness Legislation
Legislation is unnecessarily broad and applies not only to new
vaccines but also to existing drugs and devices. The bills do
not limit their application only to new vaccines used in a bioterrorist
or pandemic context. Instead, provisions in the legislation provide
that any drug, device, or biological product used to "diagnose,
mitigate, prevent, or treat" a potential pandemic may qualify
for protection. The bills also apply to any existing drug, device,
or biological product used to "diagnose, mitigate, prevent, or
treat" a side-effect of another vaccine or drug. This
means for example, that if Tamiflu qualifies for protection under
the bills because it is a potential treatment for avian flu and an
individual takes an ordinary pain reliever like Vioxx to treat side-effects
caused by Tamiflu, both Tamilu and Vioxx could be protected under
the bills' immunity provisions.
The immunity provisions insulate all drug companies from virtually
all accountability. The proposals provide sweeping immunity for
all manufacturers, distributors, administrators, and health care providers
related to the sale, testing, labeling, distribution, design, or prescription
of a covered product, no matter what the injury or how bad the drug
company's conduct. This even applies to drug companies who are grossly
negligent or intentionally harmful. Only one, effectively meaningless
exception is offered: an injured person may petition the Secretary
of HHS or the U.S. Attorney General to allow a case against a drug
company to go forward. Those entities have the sole discretion to
investigate or simply to decline the petition. If a petition is denied,
there is no other option or remedy available to that injured individual;
there is no appeals process through which to challenge the Secretary's
or Attorney General's decision. In the unlikely event that an investigation
occurs, the Secretary is bound by such unreasonably high standards
of proof, that in order for the Secretary or Attorney General to make
a finding that a claim against a drug company could go forward, he
would have to make findings virtually impossible to prove.
There is no reasonable limit to the bills' application. Immunity
may be triggered at any time because the Secretary of HHS is given
broad and unfettered discretion to declare a "public health emergency"
when there is an actual or potential threat of a pandemic disease
occurring. This could occur tomorrow in light of new risks posed by
such diseases as avian flu. Once this declaration occurs, anything
deemed a "countermeasure" under the bills would receive
wholesale liability protection. The drug or vaccine is shielded from
liability whether or not it is actually given in response to a pandemic
health emergency.
Proposals allow drug companies access to the court system, but
do not give that same right to injured Americans. These efforts
to shield manufacturers cynically allow only the drug company to appeal
to the federal court system, but not an injured individual. In the
unlikely event that the Secretary or Attorney General rules that a
claim may go forward against a drug company, the drug company is allowed
to appeal that decision to the United States District Court. To add
insult to injury, the injured individual is completely barred from
participating in this appeals process. The bills go to great lengths
to preserve a drug company's constitutional right to have access to
a court system but do nothing to protect that same right for injured
Americans.
Eliminating citizens' access to civil justice is not only unecessary
and unsafe - it's also wholly unconstitutional. The Supreme
Court of the United States has repeatedly made clear that constitutional
rights, including specifically an injured person's right to a jury
trial, may not be simply eliminated. The legislature must offer a
reasonably equivalent right to a remedy. The proposed bills, however,
sweep away a host of rights under state and federal law for persons
who may be injured by drugs and vaccines. Yet, they neither establish
nor provide access to an alternative compensation system. Persons
are not permitted even to petition a court for the right to seek compensation.
November 8, 2005
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