FDA Slams EpiPen Maker For Doing Nothing While Hundreds Failed, People Died (arstechnica.com)
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: The manufacturer of EpiPen devices failed to address known malfunctions in its epinephrine auto-injectors even as hundreds of customer complaints rolled in and failures were linked to deaths, according to the Food and Drug Administration. The damning allegations came to light today when the FDA posted a warning letter it sent September 5 to the manufacturer, Meridian Medical Technologies, Inc. The company (which is owned by Pfizer) produces EpiPens for Mylan, which owns the devices and is notorious for dramatically raising prices by more than 400 percent in recent years. The auto-injectors are designed to be used during life-threatening allergic reactions to provide a quick shot of epinephrine. If they fail to fire, people experiencing a reaction can die or suffer serious illnesses. According to the FDA, that's exactly what happened for hundreds of customers. In the letter, the agency wrote: "In fact, your own data show that you received hundreds of complaints that your EpiPen products failed to operate during life-threatening emergencies, including some situations in which patients subsequently died."
The agency goes on to lambast Meridian Medical for failing to investigate problems with the devices, recall bad batches, and follow-up on problems found. For instance, a customer made a complaint in April 2016 that an EpiPen failed. When Meridian disassembled the device, it found a deformed component that led to the problem -- the exact same defect it had found in February when another unit failed.
The agency goes on to lambast Meridian Medical for failing to investigate problems with the devices, recall bad batches, and follow-up on problems found. For instance, a customer made a complaint in April 2016 that an EpiPen failed. When Meridian disassembled the device, it found a deformed component that led to the problem -- the exact same defect it had found in February when another unit failed.
Yeah, that'll teach 'em.
I'm sure that with the Mylan CEO being the daughter of a U.S. senator, there will be a thorough investigation of all of this.
How to shake up the barrel!
A democratic senator who is a reliable vote for the Republicans. Joe Manchin is the scum of the earth. Being a Democrat in West Virginia means you're a Republican, as we've seen with the sitting governor deciding to formally switch to the GOP.
There are no recall elections in West Virginia for statewide or federal office-holders.
You are welcome on my lawn.
It's not as though this is a surprise or anything; but it's a pitiful follow-up to their, um, 'optimistic' pricing practices.
The whole selling point of their product is reliable delivery even by an unskilled user under duress. The epinephrine is a cheap generic; the autoinjector is $600 of mechanism wrapped around it.
For that kind of money you deserve excellence; and they don't even appear to be delivering enough to avoid credible charges of negligence. That's just pitiful.
In The Netherlands there was a recall for two bad EpiPen batches last year. Hence I wonder why the same isn't done in the USA. But for better reasons I switched manufacturer: If you compare EpiPen, Jext and Emerade, you will find that the needle length of Emerade is significantly longer. Therefore penetrating the skin deeper and overcome first world problem: fat. The drug is then delivered in the muscle, where it is supposed to be. Next to that, the operation of the Emerade is more successful without advanced patient instruction and practice.
Support Eachother, Copy Dutch Property!
Capitalism: bread waits for people. Socialism: people wait for bread.
And then you have the American system. Corporations using the government to bully the people into buying overpriced bread that nobody really wants. ;-)