Joint replacements are the #1 expenditure of Medicare. The process of approving these medical devices is flawed according to the Institute of Medicine. It is time for patients' voices to be heard as stakeholders and for public support for increased medical device industry accountability and heightened protections for patients. Post-market registry. Product warranty. Patient/consumer stakeholder equity. Rescind industry pre-emptions/entitlements. All clinical trials must report all data.
Please share what you have learned!
Twitter: @JjrkCh
Showing posts with label Consumer Product Safety. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Consumer Product Safety. Show all posts

Saturday, May 9, 2015

Giant J&J quietly moves/'streamlines' annual meeting.

Brunswick-Based Pharmaceutical Company: "We Have Adjusted the Format of This Meeting to Better Align With Current Industry Practices"

ARTICLE | APRIL 14, 2015 - 11:30AM | BY DAVE SCHATZ

NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ–For the first time since April 26, 1989, Johnson & Johnson's annual shareholders meeting will be held at the historic State Theatre in New Brunswick.
After frequent protests at previous shareholder meetings, the consumer products giant has quietly moved the big meeting, coming up on April 23 at 10 a.m., from its usual location, the Hyatt Regency Hotel, and has significantly shortened the meeting to one hour.
Previous meetings included a free lunch and gift bag for all in attendance, but that won't be the case this year.
“We are pleased to be hosting the 2015 Annual Meeting at The State Theatre of New Jersey. Johnson & Johnson is a long-time supporter of this wonderful space, and it has hosted our Annual Shareholders Meeting in the past,” said a J&J spokeswoman.
J&J said they've adjusted the format of the upcoming meeting “to better align with current industry practices.” It will be webcast live, and also available for replay following the meeting. 
But the running time of the meeting is scheduled for only one-hour, while 2014's ran for at least an hour and one-half. According to J&J it will include the formal completion of items of business for the year, a brief update from Chairman/CEO Alex Gorsky, and an open question and answer session.
“The agenda for the meeting remains essentially unchanged, but the business highlights presentation has been streamlined,” J&J told NB Today.
“We conducted a benchmarking study of our peer companies to understand best practices for these meetings and have adjusted our program to align with those standards.”
The group held a news conference on the public sidewalk where many shareholders saw the demonstration.

Last year, police constructed a fire and set off an explosion after the meeting was over.
“It was exploded after everything was over, like they didn't need it anymore,” said journalist Jane Akre, who gathered the group for the trip to New Brunswick. She added that she thought setting up the explosion was “overreaction.”
“You have to believe they were surprised by our visit last year,” Akre told NB Today.
“They brought in the state troopers and angry German Shepherds and even had an explosion designed to designate as a diversion if necessary.”
J&J will report financial ratios in today's First Quarter Earnings Call, which will also be available as a Webcast. Its shares fell 1.5 percent to $100.55 yesterday.
“Investors and other interested parties may access the live audio webcast of the [annual shareholders] meeting by visiting the Company's website at www.jnj.com and clicking on the webcast icon,” reads a release.


About the Author

Reporter
Dave Schatz covers mostly business, but also enjoys sports reporting.

You can contact him at dschatz@newbrunswicktoday.com or @dave_schatz on Twitter.

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Update: Sign this petition to ban uterine morcellation device.

FiDA UPDATE:
http://www.cancerletter.com/articles/20141126_1?utm_content=buffera6f9c&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer


Urgent FDA Action Turns Power Morcellation Into Rarely Used Gynecological Procedure
A Karl Storz power morcellator, one of the devices that will be affected by FDA's latest guidance. This model was used in a Brigham & Women's Hospital study testing the ability of containment bags to reduce the risk of cancer dissemination. That study has been halted.
By Matthew Bin Han Ong  
The power morcellator should no longer be used for hysterectomies or fibroid removal in the vast majority of women getting these procedures, FDA declared in a highly anticipated guidance document Nov. 24.
Using a new authority that bypasses public comment, the agency stopped short of imposing an outright ban on the device, but severely restricted its use in the following manner:
• The agency placed a “black box” label on the device, warning that the use of power morcellators during fibroid surgery may spread cancer and decrease the long-term survival of patients. The boxed warning is FDA’s sternest warning for significant risk of serious or life-threatening adverse effects.
• The agency’s guidance decreed that power morcellators are contraindicated for removal of uterine tissue in menopausal and post-menopausal women, and in women who are eligible for surgeries that remove uterine tissue intact i.e. through the vagina or mini-laparotor.
• Similarly, power morcellators are now contraindicated in gynecologic surgery in which the tissue to be morcellated is known or suspected to be cancerous.
Categorized as a Class II moderate-risk surgical device by FDA, the power morcellator is used to cut tissue into small fragments for removal through small incisions. When used in patients with undetected or missed uterine cancers, the device spreads malignant tissue in the patient’s abdominal cavity, rapidly upstaging the disease (The Cancer Letter, July 4).
FDA’s move is expected to adversely impact minimally invasive surgical gynecologists, who made power morcellation a routine procedure, which is performed in a subset of an estimated 50,000 to 100,000 women who undergo laparoscopic procedures for hysterectomy each year in the United States.
Class II devices are cleared through the 510(k) process, which applies to new devices that are based on comparability to predicate devices already in use. Only Class III high-risk devices require an FDA premarket approval application.
Here, semantics mean a lot: the standards for Class II clearance aren’t as rigorous as for Class III approval.
This week’s FDA guidance does not reclassify the power morcellators. It is unclear whether FDA intends to re-categorize power morcellators or require manufacturers to resubmit the devices for approval as Class III devices.
In its decision, the agency cited its earlier estimate that one in 350 women who are undergoing hysterectomy or myomectomy for fibroids is found to have an unsuspected uterine sarcoma. The American Association of Gynecologic Laparoscopists disagrees with the estimate, citing international data reporting lower prevalence rates.
“The FDA decision today is based on what we believe is best for patients,” William Maisel, deputy director for science and chief scientist at the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, said at a press call Nov. 24. “The contraindications cover the vast majority of women who would undergo morcellation during myomectomy or hysterectomy, which should reduce the use of the device in patients at greatest risk.”
The contraindications are so broad that they make morcellation appropriate only for young women who may choose, after a consent process, to undergo the minimally invasive procedure to preserve their ability to bear children.
The agency’s decision comes nearly a year after former Harvard physicians Amy Reed and Hooman Noorchashm launched a vigorous campaign that drew FDA’s attention to the issue (The Cancer Letter, July 4).
“I think it’s a good first step, or second step after the April advisory,” said Rick Kaitz, a Boston attorney whose wife, Erica, died after her leiomyosarcoma was upstaged by power morcellation performed at Brigham & Women’s Hospital, a Harvard-affiliated institution (The Cancer Letter, Nov. 21).
“In most circumstances, I can’t imagine that this industry is going to continue to survive at the moment. I think FDA’s decision is strong enough to significantly impact the nature of the practice,” Kaitz said.
“Drs. Reed and Noorchashm should be really saluted for the amount of progress they’ve made within a relatively short period of time. I know for all of us it seems like forever, but I’m very encouraged.”

Immediately in Effect
This is the first time FDA has used an authority, called the “Immediately In Effect” guidance.
According to Maisel, the IIE was created by CDRH to act swiftly on issues that the agency would normally respond to with a routine guidance.
“We didn’t feel that issuing this guidance in draft form, and waiting for a comment period, and then finalizing it, is in the best interests of the public health,” Maisel said at the press call.
Bill Vodra, a former FDA associate chief counsel for drugs, said the agency’s rapid response is extraordinary.
“The timeframe of this is pretty astoundingly fast, for me at least,” Vodra said to The Cancer Letter. “If you get people who understand the system i.e. doctors who become patients, they can push much more aggressively than the ordinary consumer can. What I’m most impressed by here is how quickly they’ve done this.”
Vodra helped draft many agency regulations still in use, including those implementing the Controlled Substances Act and FDA’s rules for Good Manufacturing Practices, Good Laboratory Practices, Good Clinical Practices, bioequivalency and the Orange Book.
“Compare how long it took FDA to address this issue, with, let’s say, the surgical mesh that was being used a couple of years ago—that took years for FDA to finally get around to do something about it,” Vodra said.
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, a 58,000-member professional society, said it would seek additional clarification of the agency’s guidance.
“We are pleased that the FDA’s action takes steps to enhance patient safety while allowing the appropriate use of power morcellation in gynecologic surgery for select women,” Hal Lawrence, executive vice president and CEO of ACOG, said in a statement. “The FDA’s clarification of contraindications for morcellation will help to ensure that only women at low risk for an occult malignancy will undergo laparoscopic hysterectomy or myomectomy with morcellation.
“However, we look forward to working with the FDA to provide additional clarification regarding certain language within the contraindications that could be confusing to patients and physicians.”
AAGL, another professional society, characterized FDA’s action as a setback.
“Abandoning power morcellation technology for many patients undergoing minimally invasive myomectomy, supracervical hysterectomy, or hysterectomy for a large uterus will be a setback in the care of patients with gynecologic conditions,” Franklin Loffer, AAGL medical director, said in a statement.

Observers: FDA “Severely Restricts” Device Use
FDA-watchers said the agency’s decision would likely eliminate power morcellation as a routine surgical procedure in gynecology.
“FDA’s statement is going to discourage a significant amount of use, assuming that most of these procedures are being done in post-menopausal and menopausal women. That’s a pretty clear statement. They want this to drop substantially,” said Vodra, a retired partner of Washington, D.C., law firm Arnold and Porter. “If 80 percent of the women who undergo power morcellation are peri- or post-menopausal, then 80 percent of these procedures shouldn’t be done anymore.”
“The contraindication means no rational person would use the product this way. So that’s really saying, ‘No doctor out there should use this. If a doctor goes ahead and uses it, it’s not malpractice per se, but, in many or some jurisdictions, it shifts the burden of proof from the patient to the doctor.’”
Normally, in a medical malpractice case, the patient has to show that the doctor did not follow the standards prevailing in his or her community at the time that a procedure was done or a drug was used.
“Now, any physician that continues using power morcellators, and any device company which still wishes to sell and promote these devices will be taking a huge risk in the liability arena, both medical and otherwise,” said David Challoner, emeritus vice president for health affairs at the University of Florida. “It’s de facto, not de jure.”
Challoner chaired the Institute of Medicine committee tasked by FDA and Congress in 2009 to review the 510(k) process that clears Class II devices such as the power morcellator based on predicate devices.
“I see FDA’s action as severely restricting the use of morcellation in the treatment of uterine fibroids,” Challoner said. “That’s a very desirable outcome, and it’s only slightly second-best to just banning the instruments from the market completely.”
More insurance companies may refuse to pay for power morcellation as a result of FDA’s guidance. Several companies have ended payments for the procedure prior to the guidance (The Cancer Letter, Nov. 21).
“It would be up to the insurance company and the laws governing insurance,” Vodra said. “Clearly, they could refuse to pay for any procedure that is contraindicated. But normally, a boxed warning would not be disqualifying from reimbursement.”
FDA said it would continue to consider other steps that may further reduce the risk of spreading unsuspected cancer, including preoperative cancer detection methods, or containment devices, such as bags, that can prevent dissemination of malignant tissue.
The Brigham & Women’s Hospital has halted a controversial study that combined power morcellators with “containment bags” intended to capture tissue during gynecological surgery.

Key Advocates Call for Ban
Reed and Noorchashm, the couple who led the campaign against morcellation, called FDA’s decision a “failure.”
“This is a massive and monumental failure in federal regulation,” Noorchashm said to The Cancer Letter. “From a scientific, clinical, surgical and common sense perspective, it’s very clear that you don’t mince up tissues that have any degree of malignant potential inside a patient’s body.
“The FDA was confronted with this problem. They chose to not definitively regulate this problem, and that is clear demonstration of regulatory incapacity. They were given a binary decision to make and they failed. This should tell anyone with a remote understanding of the issue that the FDA is a captured agency—beholden to industry interests over patient safety.”
Reed said banning the device is the only appropriate action.
“People say we should be thankful that we’ve gotten as far as we have, that it moved as it did and we raised the level of awareness,” Reed said. “But I have to say, overall, I’m overwhelmingly disappointed with the whole decision. There is no question in my mind that they should have outright banned it, and I’m not sure what they thought they were overreaching if they did.”
FDA’s Maisel said that banning power morcellators would require doctors and patients to choose other options—typically more invasive surgery.
“Banning laparoscopic power morcellators would completely remove them from the market for all patients in all indications,” Maisel said. “We recognize that there are risks associated with all fibroid treatment options, and we believe there is a very small population in whom the benefits for this procedure.
“When the patients are appropriately informed of the potential risks, and that the potential benefits may outweigh the risks, the individual women may choose to have their procedure done, knowing the potential benefits and risks.”
Maisel said the key to preserving fertility in some women is to minimize the damage to the uterus.
“We recognize that some younger women who are interested in maintaining their ability to have children or wish to keep their uterus intact after being informed of the risk, may be candidates for this procedure,” Maisel said at the press call. “Younger women present a lower risk of having underlying cancer than older women.
“Doctors and patients should determine if the patient is in an appropriate patient, together, and the agency believes that women should have this option available to them should they wish to preserve their fertility and they are informed of the risk.
“Being able to remove the fibroid and reduce the risk of adhesions that might be associated with a traumatic surgery can help preserve fertility,” Maisel said. “Some clinicians specialize in this area, and believe that it is an important tool that needs to remain available.”
Reed and Noorchashm disagree.
Reed said no data exist to show that fertility is adversely affected in laparotomies vs. laparoscopic removal of fibroids with power morcellation.
“Firstly, I would like to see the data that mini-laparotomy versus full laparoscopy for fibroids has a detrimental impact on fertility,” said Reed, formerly an anesthesiologist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. “That’s what they are saying, that adhesions by mini-laparotomy would negatively impact the fertility of women, so they should be allowed to opt for it. I know of no data that supports that claim.”
“For such a data heavy driven argument I want to know who said that this was a problem and based on what? Because the adhesions caused by spraying a huge fibroid around likely are as significant as a laparoscopic dissection and mini-laparotomy.”
“And I think that is the important point: it’s power morcellation vs. laparoscopic dissection and mini-laparotomy, not full laparotomy.”
Reed underwent power morcellation at Brigham & Women’s Hospital in October 2013. The procedure upstaged her previously undiagnosed leiomyosarcoma, which was then aggressively treated. The disease is now in remission.
“Because of the wording of the FDA, women will still be on that table having power morcellators used at the discretion of the physician,” Reed said to The Cancer Letter. “Secondly, I would like the FDA to clarify what its intentions are in regards to studying containment devices. Knowing the potential for harm is great, is this something they intend to support human experimentation on? They clearly state that this is an area that they will watch closely. Will this be done in animals, or will they permit this to be done in humans? Surely one would think not.
“I think the FDA has some serious explaining to do.”
Noorchashm said that alternative uterus-sparing surgeries are available.
“You don’t need to use a morcellator to do a myomectomy, which is what is meant by a ‘uterine sparing’ operation. Morcellators are only used to extract the tissue from small incisions,” said Noorchashm, a cardiothoracic surgeon who formerly practiced at Brigham and who is now at Thomas Jefferson University. “To perform a uterine sparing operation, these surgeons can dissect out the problematic myomas they’ve ascertained are not malignant using intra-op or pre-op biopsies. Then, they take out the bagged myomas through a small incision. It’s really that simple. There is absolutely no need to use a morcellator.”
“You can, perfectly well, either by using laparoscopic or robotic devices, do a myomectomy and remove the myoma from the body without power morcellation through a small incision at the end of the operation. I think the concept that a uterine sparing myomectomy requires a morcellator is a smokescreen created by device advocates and gynecologists—it’s hogwash.”
Several members at an FDA advisory committee hearing in July expressed a desire to avoid any kind of morcellation of tissues (The Cancer Letter, July 25).
“Myomectomy, in and of itself, isn’t an oncologically safe procedure. There is a conundrum there,” Reed said. “But you don’t have to make it worse by spreading everything all over the abdominal cavity with power morcellation.”

Vodra: 510(k) Does Not Necessarily Protect Consumers
Pre-menopausal young women who elect to undergo power morcellation could be waiving the ability to claim medical malpractice against their physicians, if they are harmed by the surgery.
“If a woman is pre-menopausal and elects to undergo power morcellation, then if she has been warned by the doctor that these are the risks and benefits, and she then chooses the procedure, she probably has no claim whatsoever against the doctor,” Vodra said. “When a doctor uses the normal standard of care, in which you’d advise a patient before a surgery on what the risks are, the patient can opt to have it or not have it.”
However, doctors can be vulnerable in these situations if they fail to exercise due diligence.
“I could see situations in which, for example, the doctor did not do any medical history to determine whether the patient was at risk of uterine cancer, and did nothing to check or test whether this patient could have a cancer,” Vodra said.
“If there is a blood test available at some point and he didn’t run the blood test before he did the procedure, that could lead to malpractice.
“The doctor cannot say, ‘What do you want me to do?’ The patient’s not an expert, the doc is, and has an obligation to exercise due diligence according tothe standard of care in the community before surgery is done.”
Young women should not be subject to the risks of power morcellation when there are alternatives, Reed said.
“I had some degree of health literacy, but what do you do with somebody with a third grade education? What do you with somebody with prejudices against the medical establishment, and there are issues with fertility and management?” Reed said. “There are entire subsets of population who look at all this very differently than Hooman and I do.
“There are a lot of women who’d say, ‘I don’t want you to be taking my fertility away,’ even if they have no intention of having children. That’s a touchy subject, but again, you can do without morcellation.
“FDA is very quick to trash drugs that do not meet safety and efficacy criteria, but on the other hand, here’s a dangerous device, and it’s not banned. What’s the hold up?”
Vodra said the premarket requirements for drugs, and for Class II devices such as the power morcellator are very different.
“In the drug arena, drugs have to be shown to be safe and effective for a specific use in order to get them into the marketplace,” Vodra said. “In the device arena, you don’t have to.
“The 510(k) process means you simply have to show that you’re substantially equivalent to another device that’s in the marketplace. You don’t have to show that you’re effective at doing anything, and in a lot of products—like the scalpel—you don’t need to.
“If I read the history of the power morcellator right, it was cleared for one purpose, and doctors started using it for a different purpose, so that’s where the problem arose.
“That’s where drugs and devices differ. Almost all drugs have to be shown to be effective for a specific use before they can get to the market for any use, whereas devices don’t have to do that.
“That’s what the 2011 IOM report on the 510(k) is about. The 510(k) is not protecting the consumer in the way people think it is.
“People thought that the devices that were cleared are safe, but they are not approved. FDA approves products that are safe and effective, but it clears devices that can prove to be equivalent to something else.”

Copyright (c) 2014 The Cancer Letter Inc.



 http://petitions.moveon.org/sign/campaign-against-morcellatio.fb49?source=s.fb&r_by=10266987

PLEASE SIGN THIS PETITION AND SHARE !!



courtesy of American Recall Center

Dr. Hooman Noorchashm has spearheaded this effort because his wife, Dr. Amy Reed is one of the victims of this FAILED and essentially unregulated device that spreads and upgrades undetectable cancerous tissue in the uterus.  There are other alternatives for hysterectomy that do not expose women to this PREVENTABLE catastrophic and irreversible danger.  

Other references:











Thursday, December 13, 2012

End Secrecy, Save Lives: Consumers Union patient stories

Steven Baker profiled by Consumers Union Safe Patient Project.
Information on growing patient harm is suppressed by powerful interests that benefit from underfunded research and regulation.  Taxpayers and consumers deserve to know which medical devices are safe and effective.  (Especially now when joint replacements are the #1 expenditure of Medicare!)  Patients deserve to know more about an implant device than they do about a toaster oven they are considering for purchase.  Informed consent must include a discussion about the FDA 510(k) clearance debate and medical device Supreme Court pre-emption (Riegel v Medtronic) and tort reform that weakens patient protections when a device fails.  The epic failures of various ICD's, surgical mesh and metal-on-metal hips were preventable.  The device industry is not entitled to profit without accountability.
Please support Consumers Union Safe Patient Project!  These patients are bravely telling their stories to benefit us all!  




Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Where are consumer protections? Not FDA!


http://mobile.reuters.com/article/idUSBRE8AK0T520121121?irpc=932

REUTERS
Wed, Nov 21 14:28 PM EST   FiDA highlight

By Tim McLaughlin
BOSTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Food and Drug Administration took 684 days to issue a warning letter after uncovering infractions that could potentially harm patients at the pharmacy at the center of the deadly U.S. meningitis outbreak, newly released documents show.
The New England Compounding Center (NECC) chastised the FDA in a letter dated January 5, 2007, telling the agency its response time was nearly 18 months longer than the FDA's average response, according to letters released under an open records request.
"We believe that FDA's nearly two year delay in issuing the Warning Letter contradicts FDA's rhetoric regarding the asserted risks associated with our compounded products," NECC co-owner and chief pharmacist Barry Cadden said in the letter, released by the FDA under an open records request.
The FDA acknowledged in a letter to Cadden dated October 31, 2008, that there had been a "significant delay" in its response but insisted that the delay "in no way diminishes our serious concerns about your firm's operations."
On Wednesday, a spokeswoman for the FDA, Erica Jefferson, said the delay in issuing the warning letter was due to the agency's limited, unclear and contested authority.
"During the time between the inspection of NECC and the issuance of the warning letter, there was ongoing litigation pertaining to pharmacy compounding and significant internal discussion about how to regulate compounders, all of which delayed FDA," she said.
The FDA has asked lawmakers to clarify its authority to oversee large-scale drug compounders such as NECC. But several Republicans have argued that the agency already had the authority that could have prevented the outbreak.
And on November 19, a congressional panel investigating the outbreak told the FDA not to expect new authority until it releases documents about its role.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 34 people have died and 490 have been injured after Framingham, Massachusetts-based NECC shipped a tainted steroid, methylprednisolone acetate, to medical facilities throughout the United States. The steroid is typically used to ease back pain.
On Tuesday, defense lawyers for NECC's owners told a U.S. District Judge in Boston there was nothing to show they had a direct hand in the cause of the meningitis outbreak.
INDIGNANT AND UNCOOPERATIVE
NECC has consistently pushed back against attempts by regulators to discipline it, despite a series of violations dating back to 1999.
And the pharmacy's principals have sometimes shown little respect for the FDA or its inspectors.
During a re-inspection of the pharmacy in 2004 following up on certain marketing and packaging violations, Cadden and his brother-in-law, Gregory Conigliaro, a co-owner of NECC, became indignant, according to a 2005 memorandum from the FDA inspector. Cadden declined to cooperate without speaking to a lawyer first and at one point instructed his brother-in-law not to answer any more questions.
Conigliaro said he had "a lot of things to finish and just did not have the time to sit with us to answer our questions," the inspector said in his memo.
The FDA's eventual warning letter to NECC in December 2006 was based on an inspection that began in September 2004 and ended on January 19, 2005, according to the documents.
(Reporting by Tim McLaughlin; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe and Andre Grenon)

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Millions of Medical Device Recalls


PRESS RELEASE
Aug. 21, 2012, 9:43 a.m. EDT
Over 123 Million Medical Device Units Recalled in Second Quarter of 2012, Reaching an Eight-Quarter High, According to the ExpertRECALL Index
Consumer Product Safety Incidents Jump 35 Percent; Slight Uptick in Food Recalls  
INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 21, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- 
FiDA highlight added
More than 123 million units in the medical device category - which includes products like knee replacements, syringes, gels used in ultrasound procedures, dental implants, and products used in heart surgery - were recalled during the second quarter of 2012, according to the quarterly ExpertRECALL(TM) Index released today.
While the number of medical device recalls governed by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) declined 13 percent compared with the previous quarter, the number of products affected by such announcements reached an eight-quarter high, breaking 100 million units for the first time since the third quarter of 2010. Food recalls increased 19 percent when compared with the previous quarter, while the rate of recalls affecting consumer products and pharmaceuticals remained largely unchanged.
When compared with the previous quarter, the ExpertRECALL Index found that 35 percent more consumer product safety incidents were reported to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), resulting in 154 injuries and two deaths. While recalls of all children's and infant products reached a six-quarter low during the second quarter of 2012, recalls of child nursery equipment and supplies increased by 60 percent. Recalls of toys decreased 80 percent from the first quarter to the second quarter.
"The fact that more than 120 million medical device units were affected by recalls last quarter cannot be ignored, particularly because it comes during a time when America's 50 million aging Baby Boomers are placing increasingly high demand on life-saving medical devices," said Mike Rozembajgier, vice president of recalls at Stericycle ExpertRECALL. "The growing importance of this product category means that companies need to have a comprehensive recall plan in place that can be deployed within the blink of an eye and can effectively protect their customers and brand. Manufacturers, suppliers, hospitals and retailers must also continue to stay diligent in their efforts to ensure product and consumer safety in an ever-changing environment, particularly in light of FDA's recent proposals to track certain medical devices."
The ExpertRECALL Index also found that 80 percent of pharmaceutical products recalled during the second quarter of 2012 affected prescription medications.
Forty percent of food recalls were initiated due to undeclared allergens or other allergen concerns, the lead food recall cause, which continues an eight-quarter trend. Salmonella contamination, the presence of Listeria monocytogenes and other foodborne illness concerns combined also accounted for nearly 40 percent of food recalls.
"It is critical that FDA- and CPSC-regulated industries follow the agencies' requirements and guidelines to assure that they are met, thus diminishing the likelihood of a violative product and subsequent recalls," said former FDA Senior Recall Coordinator Willie Bryant, a Stericycle consultant. "Additionally, every regulated firm needs to be prepared with a vetted Standard Operating Procedure in place for recalls so that it is ready when that unexpected recall develops."
The 2012 second quarter ExpertRECALL Index is the only report that aggregates and tracks cumulative recall data from the CPSC and the FDA. Stericycle ExpertRECALL compiles the ExpertRECALL Index from data issued by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the Consumer Product Safety Commission. The ExpertRECALL Index report is available online at http://www.expertrecall.com/recallindex .
About Stericycle ExpertRECALL(TM) Stericycle ExpertRECALL(TM) is the industry leader in managing consumer product, pharmaceutical, medical device, juvenile product, and food and beverage recalls. Stericycle ExpertRECALL streamlines the entire product recall process and manages Notification & Response, Processing & Tracking, and Compliance & Reporting for a variety of companies. For more information, visit http://www.expertrecall.com .
SOURCE Stericycle ExpertRECALL