Imagine That
- by MRSNO1MAX
- 2009-02-13 02:02:24
- Batteries & Leads
- 1818 views
- 6 comments
Judge Who Dismissed Sprint Fidelis Lawsuits Linked to
A judge who recently dismissed hundreds of Medtronic Sprint Fidelis defibrillator lead injury lawsuits apparently has a personal connection to the device maker. According to The Wall Street Journal, the son of Judge Richard H. Kyle of the federal district court in Minneapolis is employed by a law firm that has had Medtronic as a client for quite a while.
Medtronic suspended sales of its Sprint Fidelis Leads in October 2007, after receiving reports of 5 fatalities linked to lead fractures. A lead is a wire that connects an implantable defibrillator to the heart. When it breaks, the defibrillator can emit a massive and painful shock. And in the worse case scenario, the fractured lead can prevent a defibrillator from sending a necessary, lifesaving shock to the heart. Replacing a lead is not an easy procedure, as the invasive surgery can cause the tissue of the blood vessels and heart to tear. In fact, replacing a defibrillator lead is so risky that patients with Sprint Fidelis Leads were told to leave the defective components in place unless they fracture.
Before the recall, Sprint Fidelis leads had been implanted with 90% of Medtronics defibrillators. According to the Wall Street Journal, 268,000 defective Sprint Fidelis Leads had been implanted worldwide, and about 235,000 people still had these leads in their chests when the recall was issued. Not surprisingly, the Sprint Fidelis recall spawned scores of personal injury lawsuits.
Last month, Judge Kyle dismissed hundreds of Sprint Fidelis lawsuits that had been consolidated in federal court in Minneapolis. The judge based his decision on a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling called Riegel vs. Medtronic (which did not involve the Sprint Fidelis lead) that said the Medical Device Amendments of 1976 to the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act that require Food & Drug Administration (FDA) approval of medical devices preempt product liability lawsuits in state courts. The judge wrote that the court recognizes that at least some plaintiffs have suffered injuries from using Sprint Fidelis leads, and the court is not unsympathetic to their plight. But plaintiffs assert claims for which the court simply cannot provide a remedy. In the decision, the judge said that it was up to Congress to change the law that bars such lawsuits.
According to The Wall Street Journal, Judge Kyle said lawyers for Sprint Fidelis plaintiffs raised the issue of his son's relationship with Medtronic in a conference call Thursday. Judge Kyle told the Journal that during the call, plaintiffs' lawyers told him they plan to seek his disqualification from the litigation.
Judge Kyle said in the Journal interview that he does not believe his son's connection to Medtronic poses a conflict for him. For its part, that law firm, Fredrikson & Byron, said in a statement that it does represent Medtronic in the Sprint Fidelis litigation.
One legal expert interviewed by the Journal said plaintiffs' lawyers could win such a disqualification if they meet a "tough test that a Medtronic loss would have a substantially negative effect on the son's firm." In that case, the expert said, the cases Judge Kyle dismissed could be reinstated and sent to a new judge.
6 Comments
I know Im going to get Blasted for this
by walkerd - 2009-02-14 07:02:47
But here I go. Do I think that Medtronic should be held accountable for defective materials yes, but I do think that all the lawsuits for every little thing medically is why people cant afford Insurance, why there are only a few compainies that make medical devices and why costs are so high. I have a medtronic pm/defib with three leads and I would pray to god that they are good. Would I expect compinsation if they wherent yes I would think that compainies would take responsiabily for defective items if something happened to me, for my wifes sake. But sueing for billions of dollars to me is rediculous. the money the medical places make a compensation would only be to thier best interest, but with all the legal actions that now take place its a wonder we get any break threws in the medical or anyother field due to the scare of being sued for billions. Sorry but that is my feelings and if I get blasted for my opions then so be it. They are pieces of a machine and sometimes things will happen, but Im not saying that compaines, hospitals, doctors or whom ever provide services and care if at thier fault should be held accountable without ambulance chanceing lawyers. just my two cents worth. Remember be gentle in my spanking which I know Im going to recieve. also remember I had emergency bypass and have a pm/defib and dont want to get to stressed out by getting yelled at for my opion thank you in advance.
dave
Be gentle
by walkerd - 2009-02-14 08:02:12
lol. A light spanking would be all right lol. Oh we are bad. Thanks Sue and happy valentines day to you also. What an holiday for us with heart defects.lol. I guess we could look at it like our special day happey hearts day to all.
Lvya to
dave
In a perfect World
by MRSNO1MAX - 2009-02-14 09:02:05
Maybe if Medtronic didn't know that the leads were bad and not tell the people and maybe if Medtronic didn't piggyback the wires on ones that were already approved by the FDA and were not tested.I don't want millions I have work all my life and all of this has just about bankrupted me. It's not like buying a new car or a new house they are playing with peoples lives. If they know something is wrong they need to be honest and upfront about it, not let you here about it on television. My lead punture my heart because it had to be removed. Granted I'm alive but I bet the familes of the five people who died because of this won't agree with you.
Im not disagreeing with you
by walkerd - 2009-02-14 10:02:49
that Medtronic or whom ever should not be accountable, but all I see on tv are adds from lawyers trying to get everyone to sue for anything is all I ment. Everything that is written is not always gospel that everyone takes it to be. I to have suffered hardships with everything that has happened, and I never said that if they knew and that would be worse that they shouldnt be accountable. And I also like being alive to be with my family and friends Mrs no1, All I ment was it just seems like we as a society just sit back and sue for any little thing is all. reread my post not once did I say they shouldnt be held accountable. If it comes out that the judge did what they say he did then he should face jail time, also any excutives that knew and didnt disclose information should also face jail time. And Im deeply sorry for anything that happened to you or anyone else afffected by this. Like I said I also have medtronic machineary implanted in my body. Not trying to make you or anyone else mad and if I did I appolize for that. All I ask is reread.
dave
Moronic? FDA
by ElectricFrank - 2009-02-14 12:02:20
The FDA isn't moronic. They just know where some of their people might be looking for a lucrative job some day! It makes perfect sense.
frank
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I am just grateful to God that I lived long enough to have my ICD put in. So many people are not as lucky as us; even though we sometimes don't feel lucky.
Who decides what
by mrag - 2009-02-13 06:02:25
It seems to me that it was the Supreme Court that issued the ruling more or less saying if the moronic FDA approves something, then the manufacturer has assumed immunity (assuming no fraud, etc) from all patient claims. Nice deal if you can get it.
Now, anyone want to buy some extra peanut butter that I've stored away?