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Vioxx Press Kit
The Vioxx Verdict Message: "Safety Before Sales"
Evidence from the Vioxx trial shows that Merck executives
abused their power by putting a drug on the market they knew
was unsafe and even deadly. Carol Ernst's last resort was the
civil justice system and her attorney made sure she had a fair
shake against Merck's corporate defense lawyers.
This case highlights one of the many problems with the medical
malpractice bill that is likely to be considered in the U.S.
Senate this fall. The bill is similar to the one passed in the
U.S. House of Representatives over the summer, which provides
immunity to pharmaceutical
companies for putting dangerous FDA-approved drugs on the market,
among other things.
Other key points:
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The Vioxx verdict proves that our civil justice system
lets ordinary Americans hold even the largest and wealthiest
corporations accountable for putting sales ahead of safety.
FDA scientist David Graham told Congress that Vioxx
contributed to the death of as many as 55,000 Americans.
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Merck knew Vioxx was dangerous.
Merck's
own memos prove the company knew Vioxx had heart risks
as early as 1997. Those risks were confirmed by a clinical
trial in 2000. Ignoring this, Merck made billions by aggressively
marketed the drug.
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Merck trained drug representatives to dodge questions from
doctors about the safety of the drug.
Merck even invented a
game called "dodgeball" to teach drug representatives
how to evade doctors' tough questions about safety. Merck
also sent doctors a misleading 2001 letter understating
the drug's risks. And if doctors weren't deterred, internal
memos prove Merck worked to discredit questioning doctors.
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$229 million in punitive damages was what Merck officials
estimated the company would save by not correcting Vioxx's
warning label
Merck's CEO focused on promoting Vioxx's sales not safety
warnings because Vioxx sales were critical to Merck's bottom
line. The punitive damage verdict sent a clear message to
Merck and other drug companies that safety comes before
sales.
- Merck tried to avoid its responsibility by lobbying Congress
for medical
malpractice legislation that would have immunized it from
almost all of this verdict.
Merck spent $30,390,294 to lobby the U.S. Congress and
federal agencies over the last five years.
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Big pharmaceutical companies will never police themselves
when CEO salaries and bonuses depend on sales. Our only
protection is the civil justice system.
Posted: August 26, 2005
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