Texas Personal Injury Lawyers – Jim Adler & Associates – Blog

March 28, 2008

Gas Tank Explosion Lawyers|Refinery Explosions

Gas Tank Explosion Lawyers|Refinery Explosions Gas Tank Explosion Lawyers

Industrial explosions hit like bombs, killing in nanoseconds. The worst blast in U.S. history happened 40 miles south of Houston in 1947 when a ship chartered by the U.S. government that was loaded with ammonium nitrate blew up at a dock in Texas City. A second ship loaded with the chemical also exploded. (pictures)

Hundreds Died in Disaster      

The blasts killed 581 and injured hundreds. They knocked people 10 miles away in Galveston to their knees. Windows 40 miles north in Houston shattered. The blast was felt in Louisiana, 250 miles from the explosion site. Victims filed the first class action lawsuit in history against the United States government. But the courts held that it was not liable for the disaster.   

Lawyers Win Millions For Victims, Benefit Public  

Today, as lawyers win large wrongful death settlements and injury settlements for victims, they are also reaping big benefits for the general public. David Michaels, a professor at George Washington University’s School of Public Health who heads its Project on Scientific Knowledge and Public Policy, says the huge settlements show “the power of litigation” to force safe practices on factories. He says the massive 2005 BP explosion and fire in Texas City ( video) that killed 15, Injured 180 and damaged property a quarter of a mile away is a case in point.

OSHA Fines Not Enough 

OSHA fined British Petroleum $21 million after the explosion. But a company with annual revenues of more than $22 billion can easily shrug off such amounts, Michaels says. The refinery, one of the largest in the United States, had been cited for numerous safety violations in the years leading up to the 2005 explosion, but made few, if any, improvements. Now after setting aside $1.6 billion to settle victim lawsuits, it has finally allocated $1 billion to make safety improvements to the plant. 

Drug Company Sales |Unsolved Mystery|One Thousand Lives A Month

Filed under: Defective Drugs — Tags: , , — Jodie Sinclair @ 3:00 pm

Drug Company Sales|Unsolved Mystery
The story of Trasylol isn’t an unsolved mystery anymore. But it reads a lot like a crime story about corporate greed, hidden evidence, and a whistle blower who exposed a major drug company that allegedly hid bad information about one of drugs to protect its profits. The company – Bayer AG – denies any improprieties and maintains that its drug is safe when used according to labeling.
Evidence hidden from FDA The Federal Drug Administration approved Trasylol in 1993 for use in patients at high risk of bleeding with some types of heart surgery. The FDA noted that kidney toxicity could be a problem when it approved the drug. What the FDA did not know then, according to a 60 Minutes report in February 2008, is that Trasylol’s manufacturer had evidence from a German doctor that it caused severe kidney damage in laboratory animals. The 60 Minutes report, One Thousand Lives A Month, featured the researcher, Dr. Juergen Fischer. He told CBS that Bayer AG, the drug’s manufacturer, wasn’t interested in examining “these side effects” when he revealed them to the company in the 1980s. By 1998, the FDA expanded the use of Trasylol, allowing it to be used in all heart bypass surgeries.
Study Says Many Deaths Linked to Trasylol
In 2006, a prominent American researcher, Dr. Dennis Mangano, the man who discovered that aspirin reduces the risk of heart attack, published a study in the New England of Medicine showing that Traslylol was severely damaged kidneys and causing thousands of death. By then, Bayer’s Trasylol sales had soared to $300 million a year.
Whistle Blower Reveals Trasylol Findings
eacting to the 2006 report, the FDA held hearings. Since the Mangano study was not conducted according to the strict medical protocols that the FDA favors – it tracked actual hospital records – the federal agency left the drug on the market.But the FDA didn’t get all the information about Trasylol at that hearing from senior Bayer AG representatives who knew that a study they commissioned confirmed Mangano’s findings. A week later the Harvard doctor who did the Bayer study went to the FDA and blew the whistle.
Trasylol Still Used
In November 2007, the FDA asked Bayer AG to remove the drug from the American market for safety reasons. But it is still available. The FDA suspension includes a “slow phase out of Trasylol from the marketplace to decrease the possibility of shortages of the alternative drugs,” according to a statement from an FDA spokesman in U.S. News & World Report. Bayer maintains that Trasylol ”has a favorable risk benefit profile when used according to labeling.”

Levaquin 500mg|Bad Effects of Drugs

Filed under: Defective Drugs — Tags: , — Jodie Sinclair @ 2:52 pm

Levaquin 500mg|Bad Effects of Drugs Levaquin 500mg|Bad Effects of Drugs

Patient complaints about Levaquin 500mg (Levoflaxin) read like horror stories. The bad effects of drugs meant to cure patients jump out in the words of those who say they suffered severe side effects after taking Levaquin and other quinolone antibiotics. Many reported damage to Achilles tendons that required surgery. The complaints, aimed mainly at Levaquin and that drug’s side effects, include other quinolone antibiotics – Cipro, Tequin, Maxaquin, Inimed, Noroxin and Floxin, among others.

Patients Stories Detail Suffering

Patient posts on a web site about the drug’s effects include stories of tendon ruptures, double vision, severe rashes, insomnia, nausea, anxiety, ringing in the ears, and psychotic episodes. The comments warn others not to take the drug under any circumstances. A few, however, praise it. Levaquin is an antibacterial drug used to treat bronchitis, urinary tract infections, prostatitis and sinus infections, among others.

Official Complaints about Levaquin

Complaints about the drug and tendon ruptures received national attention in 2005 when the Attorney General of the State of Illinois formally petitioned the Food and Drug Administration to put a black box warning on Levaquin. The petition also asked that the FDA submit the entire class of quinolone drugs, including Levaquin, to its Drug Safety Oversight Board for review. In August 2006, decrying the FDA’s lack of response to that request, Public Citizen added its voice to the chorus of those urging the FDA to review Levaquin and like drugs, citing their history of tendonitis and tendon rupture. In January 2008, Public Citizen filed a federal law suit against the FDA for failing to heed its request and the Illinois request for a formal review of Levaquin. “While the FDA sits idly by and ignores the problem, more people will suffer serious tendon ruptures that could have been avoided,” said Dr. Sidney Wolfe, director of Public Citizen’s Health Research Group.

FDA New Safety Warning

The FDA recently added a new warning about Levaquin. It alerts patients to the potential of photosensitivity and phototoxicity from exposure to the sun when taking the drug. The warning joins existing warnings about tendonitis and other side effects of Levaquin. So far, the FDA has not elevated the tendonitis warning to “black box” status (the highest alert the FDA can put on a drug) as requested by the State of Illinois and Public Citizen.

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