June 18 Congressional Subcommittee Meeting About Medical Device Safety Act of 2009

This Bill, If Passed, Would Restore An Injured Patient's Right To Sue A Medical Device Manufacturer By Reversing Riegel v. Medtronic Ruling

(Posted by Tom Lamb at DrugInjuryWatch.com)

On June 18, 2009 the Health Subcommittee of the House Energy and Commerce Committee will have a hearing on the Medical Device Safety Act of 2009 (H.R. 1346).

This June 18 hearing has been titled "Medical Devices: Are Current Regulations Doing Enough for Patients?"  It is my understanding that this hearing is intended to be a follow-up to the Health Subcommittee's May 12, 2009 hearing on H.R. 1346

At this June 18 hearing I hope the idea of keeping medical device patients safe by maintaining "complementary" systems, i.e., the FDA and our civil court system, is stressed and understood.  In order to insure that our medical devices are effective and safe we need both a rigorous FDA device-approval process and court access when a defective device harms a patient.

Unfortunately, as a result of the United State Supreme Court's decision in the Riegel v. Medtronic case — which was handed down in the first part of 2008 — injured patients are currently barred from going into the court system and holding medical device manufacturers legally accountable for an injury caused by a defective device, e.g., Sprint Fidelis lead wire malfunction victims.

From my perspective, this current situation is not fair to injured patients and that is why we need Congress to pass the Medical Device Safety Act of 2009 into law.  Simply put, this bill would prevent medical device manufacturer from receiving total immunity as regards any patient injury claim simply by pointing to the FDA's prior approval of its device.  Instead, if passed, the Medical Device Safety Act would allow an injured patient to recover legal compensation when her injury was caused by a defective medical device.

What do you think about this issue of whether the federal preemption doctrine should be applied so as to prevent injured patients from suing a medical device manufacturer?

3 responses to “June 18 Congressional Subcommittee Meeting About Medical Device Safety Act of 2009”

  1. plates310@yahoo.com Avatar
    plates310@yahoo.com

    Will passing H.R. 1346 benefit
    injured patients or their lawyers?
    And what about the majority of
    patients whose lives have been
    saved/improved by the innovation
    afforded to them by preemption?

  2. Tom Lamb Avatar

    To plates31:
    For my detailed answer to the questions you asked, and perhaps to some that you did not, I refer you to an article that I wrote on this subject back in March 2008:
    Issue: Should We Be Prohibited From Filing Product Liability Lawsuits Against Medical Device Manufacturers And Pharmaceutical Companies?
    Opinion: Patient Lawsuits Are A Significant Incentive For These Manufacturers And Companies To Ensure That Their Products Are Safe For Use By American Patients
    http://www.drug-injury.com/druginjurycom/2008/03/issue-should-we.html
    Thanks for reading Drug Injury Watch.
    Tom Lamb

  3. Drug-device-combination market Avatar

    Good, Informative, keep writing

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