GlaxoSmithKline agrees to $3 billion settlement with Justice Department in largest sum of its kind over health care fraud
(CBS News) Pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline will plead guilty and pay $3 billion in the largest settlement of health care fraud in U.S. history, the Justice Department announced Monday.
The settlement will resolve criminal and civil liability from the company's unlawful promotion of certain prescription drugs. The company is to plead guilty to a three-count criminal information, including two counts of introducing misbranded antidepressant drugs Paxil and Wellbutrin to interstate commerce and one count of failing to report safety data about the diabetes drug Avandia to the FDA. The criminal complaints will total $1 billion.
GSK will also pay $2 billion to resolve civil liabilities relating to Paxil, Wellbutrin and Avandia, as well as other drugs and also resolves allegations of pricing fraud.
The Justice Department said GlaxoSmithKline unlawfully promoted Paxil for treating depression in patients under 18 without FDA approval for pediatric use. The U.S. also alleged the company published and distributed a misleading medical journal article misrepresenting the drug's efficacy in treating depression in adolescents, also sponsoring dinners, spa programs and other activities to promote that use.
The Justice Department also contends that in 2003, GSK paid millions to doctors to promote Wellbutrin, approved at the time for depression, for off-label uses by funding meetings, sometimes at lavish resorts.
For Avandia, the U.S. alleged GSK failed to report certain safety data between 2001 and 2007 that have since led to "black box" warning labels of about the drug's potential to increase risk for heart failure and heart attack.
"Today's multi-billion dollar settlement is unprecedented in both size and scope. It underscores the Administration's firm commitment to protecting the American people and holding accountable those who commit health care fraud," James M. Cole, deputy attorney general, said in a statement. "At every level, we are determined to stop practices that jeopardize patients' health, harm taxpayers, and violate the public trust - and this historic action is a clear warning to any company that chooses to break the law."
The settlement marks the end of an extensive investigation involving the FDA, FBI and Department of Health and Human Services.
"Today brings to resolution difficult, long-standing matters for GSK," CEO Sir Andrew Wittey said in a company statement. "Whilst these originate in a different era for the company, they cannot and will not be ignored. On behalf of GSK, I want to express our regret and reiterate that we have learnt from the mistakes that were made."
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Read more at www.thecorporateobserver.com
December 1998
After two years and $800,000, a panel of four independent experts appointed by Judge Sam C. Pointer, overseer of implant lawsuits in the Federal courts, concludes that scientific evidence so far has failed to show that silicone breast implants cause disease.
June 1999
The Institute of Medicine releases a 400-page report prepared by an independent committee of 13 scientists. They conclude that although silicone breast implants may be responsible for localized problems such as hardening or scarring of breast tissue, implants do not cause any major diseases such as lupus or rheumatoid arthritis. Congress had asked the Institute to set up the committee.
Aug. 30, 2011 -- A panel of expert advisors to the FDA has been asked to solve a mystery: What happened to thousands of women who enrolled in studies designed to evaluate rare complications that might arise years after they received silicone gel breast implants?
In June, after a preliminary review of study data, the FDA concluded that breast implants were largely safe and effective but were not "lifetime devices," citing high reoperation rates for complications like hardening of the breast and rupture of the implant.
That review also found no evidence that silicone implants were linked to rare problems like breast cancer or connective tissue diseases,"
and no, 1995 Dow-corning doesn't exists anymore than the concept "you're car" is true after someone steals it from you. The car you owned might exist but it's not yours and the name Dow-corning exists but it's assets were stolen and society never righted that wrong.
Mankind is doomed.
Dow-Corning was sued for defective silicone implants that leaked silicone into people's flesh.
The defect is not in dispute.
The injuries were indeed deforming, some absolutely hideous.
This is also not in dispute.
The only debate was between scientists as to the extent of the symptoms that could be directly linked to having petroleum-based chemicals in your system.
As for the bankruptcy, Dow-corning is still in business, FYI, making huge profits selling other products.
Re "jobs", it seems that you are into human sacrifice, that it is OK for businesses to cause injury, even death, to people who have done no wrong, for the sake of profit, that any activity is ok as long as you can call it a "job".
There are some jobs that need to be lost, those that depend on active wars, for example, and in this case, jobs manufacturing products known to be defective, where the defect puts those using them, even as recommended by the manufacturer, in unnecessary, life-threatening danger.
As far as being doomed, every human ever born is doomed to die, so that "revelation" of yours is certainly nothing new.
All this $3 billion fine on GSK does is raise the poison prices higher for consumers. Investigate the FDA's complicity in approving dangerous drugs and allowing payola to go to doctors if public health really is such a concern.
And another where they killed off the only strategy to stop bird flu through Nature magazine doing their dirty work is - http://avian-influenza.cirad.fr/content/download/1931/11789/file/Kennedy-F-Shortridge.pdf
Dr David Hill
Chief Executive
World Innovation Foundation
Let me rephrase that into English from Cropratese: "On behalf of GSK" (BEcause we're an LLC and you can't touch the guys who really did this), I want to express our regret (that we got caught defrauding and killing people) and reiterate that we have learnt from the mistakes that were made (so next time, we pay more for the politicians on BOTH sides, instead of just the GOP)."
I now return you to your level of spin...