|
Frist Fans Public Fears
of Avian Flu to Ram Through Sweeping Liability Shield for the
Drug Industry
Bill Would Leave Injured Consumers to Fend for Themselves
While Industry Gets a Free Ride
http://www.citizen.org/pressroom/release.cfm?ID=2098
WASHINGTON, D.C. – A proposal to immunize the drug industry from
legal accountability for death, disability or sickness caused by the use
of pandemic flu vaccines and pharmaceuticals would be a gift to
industry, but bad medicine for consumers, Public Citizen said today. The
organization’s comments came after Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.)
renewed his call for passage of legislation, which is being tacked on to
a must-pass defense spending bill and has never been debated or voted on
in either the House or Senate.
Frist’s plan is especially troubling because it provides no means for
victims who are seriously injured to seek compensation, unlike other
federal vaccine programs. Moreover, the industry does not need
additional liability protection for the flourishing market for “pandemic
vaccines” and antivirals, and the Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) already has authority to exempt drugmakers from liability
under the kind of “hazardous” circumstances that would be present during
a disease pandemic.
“Under the guise of an impending public health ‘emergency,’ Sen.
Frist is inflicting collateral damage on unsuspecting health care
workers and consumers,” said Sidney Wolfe, M.D., director of Public
Citizen’s Health Research Group. “It is amazing how far he has strayed
from the principles of first preventing harm to patients and is instead
pandering to special industry interests.”
The backroom maneuver is such bad news because:
-
Frist wants to
shield companies from legal responsibility when their negligence,
recklessness, deceptive claims – or even intentional failure to warn
users about potential dangers – sicken or kill the people who take
their pandemic vaccines and pharmaceuticals. Although
emergency vaccines and medicines may be rushed to first responders
and the public on short deadlines, with reduced scrutiny and less
stringent testing, drug companies can rest assured that they will
not have to worry about any harmful consequences. Some 4,000 people
fell ill after taking the swine flu vaccine in 1976; 500 contracted
a paralyzing nerve disorder and more than 30 people died. Some
military personnel and first responders who took the smallpox
vaccine in 2003 suffered heart attacks, increased risk of heart
inflammation and neurological disorders. None of these people would
have had any recourse under this bill. Moreover, conferring legal
immunity on the drug industry could thwart the public health goals
that a pandemic disease program is designed to achieve: ensuring
that a critical mass of people are vaccinated or accept prophylactic
treatments to stop the outbreak. The 2003 smallpox campaign failed
in part because both first responders and ordinary citizens balked
once they knew that lawsuits against the manufacturer were barred
and they would have no way to get compensation if injured.
-
Frist’s scheme
gives innocent victims no means of obtaining compensation. Ordinarily,
when the government grants liability exemptions to companies, it
provides some form of relief for consumers who are injured. For
example, the 1976 Swine Flu Act allowed those who had bad reactions
to the vaccine to sue the government under an expanded version of
the Federal Tort Claims Act. In 2003, the government set up a
compensation plan for people injured by the smallpox vaccine after
people refused to get vaccinated without it. And since 1986, a
National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program has been available for
children suffering bad reactions to childhood vaccines. In contrast,
Frist’s plan would set up a system whereby injured people could seek
compensation only if they could first clear hurdles so high as to
effectively bar any chance of recovering damages.
-
Frist’s claim
that drug companies need the incentive of a liability shield because
the vaccine business is not lucrative enough is bogus. The
same companies that would benefit under Frist’s plan already are
investing heavily in vaccine and antiviral production, lured by the
prospect of huge profits driven by global need and the certainty of
large government purchases. Established vaccine manufacturer Chiron
has been working on an H5N1 vaccine since 1997. Novartis, which
already owned 42 percent of Chiron, bought the rest of the company
this past fall, offering the company 23 percent above its closing
share price at the time of the deal. Roche estimates that sales of
its antiviral Tamiflu will reach $1 billion in 2005 – about four
times the 2004 level. Biotech firms like Novavax and Vical are
competing to develop improved vaccine production techniques –and
seeing their stock values soar to new heights.
-
Frist is
deceiving the public by not revealing that government
indemnification of drug companies already is available under
existing law and has been incorporated into recent contracts. Under
an executive order, HHS can indemnify contractors that may not have
sufficient insurance to cover their legal liability for damages. The
contract that Sanofi-Aventis signed in September with HHS for $100
million worth of avian flu vaccine contains such an indemnification
clause, according to Hill staffers familiar with the deal. Chiron’s
contract for $62.5 million worth of avian flu, signed in October,
also has the indemnification provision. In fact, the HHS Pandemic
Influenza Plan released in November lists in its appendix of legal
authorities “Executive Order 10789, as amended by Executive Order
13232” giving the agency the right to indemnify its contractors
under the Federal Acquisition Regulations, 48 C.F.R. 50.403, for
risks not covered by private insurers. Accordingly, Frist’s claim
that immunity from liability is needed so that companies will agree
to produce vaccines is unfounded.
“Giving blanket immunity to the drug industry without providing any
means for victims or their families to get compensation for serious
injury or death is unconscionable,” said Jillian Aldebron, civil justice
counsel for Public Citizen’s Congress Watch division. “It looks like
Christmas will come early for the drug industry, but consumers will only
get a lump of coal.”
###
|