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.
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Showing posts with label Newcastle Herald. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Newcastle Herald. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

AMS (American Medical Systems,now Endo and J&J (Johnson & Johnson/JNJ) HARM Women FOR PROFIT in AU



  • Joanne McCarthy  AUGUST 22 2017 - 12:11PM

The Australian Medical Association acted as exclusive distributor of an Australian-invented pelvic mesh device for women that helped spark a global pelvic mesh scandal after it was sold and registered for use in America in 2001.
The AMA's marketing of the Intravaginal Sling (IVS) Tunneller device as an "Australian medical design breakthrough" to treat incontinence and prolapse, despite women's reports of complications in Western Australian public hospital trials from as early as 1989, was "a long way from our proudest hour", said current AMA president Dr Michael Gannon.

Australian Medical Association national president Dr Michael Gannon confirmed the AMA promoted and distributed a pelvic mesh device for women that helped spark a global pelvic mesh scandal. 
"It is unfortunately the case that many women have been injured by these kinds of operations. To call this a tragedy is not overstating it at all," he said, after confirming a wholly-owned subsidiary of the AMA's Western Australian branch promoted and exclusively distributed the IVS device.
It was a controversial decision that "I'm sure they now regret", and which some Perth gynaecologists continued to be unhappy about more than 15 years later, he said.

"I can only answer that in good faith the AMA WA thought it was a good product. History will not judge that decision kindly. It already has not judged that decision kindly," Dr Gannon said.

His comments come only months after the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists conceded there was "very little robust information" of the long term safety of some prolapse mesh devices, despite estimates more than 30,000 Australian women received them.

The IVS Tunneller's sale to Tyco Health and registration in America in April, 2001 was used by pharmaceutical giants, including Johnson & Johnson, to register their own prolapse devices by arguing they were "substantially the same" as IVS and subsequent devices, without producing independent evidence of safety. They were then cleared for use in Australia.

More than 700 Australian women alleging serious and permanent injuries after pelvic mesh surgery for incontinence and prolapse are suing Johnson & Johnson in a Federal Court case in Sydney.

An Australian Medical Association document describing the IVS Tunneller device as an "Australian medical design breakthrough" to treat incontinence and prolapse in women.
Another 300 Australian women are registered for a second class action against American Medical Systems (AMS), which developed pelvic mesh devices including Perigee and Apogee. Apogee was cleared for use in America in 2004, after AMS argued it was "substantially the same" as the Australian-invented IVS Tunneller.
Dr Gannon, a Western Australian obstetrician and gynaecologist, said he was aware of "hundreds of operations" by Perth specialists trying to "remedy the damage" caused by mesh devices including the IVS.

Australian Pelvic Mesh Support Group members fought for a Senate inquiry into how pelvic mesh devices were cleared for use in Australia. 
"I have been personally involved in the care of women who have suffered greatly from bladder dysfunction, bowel dysfunction and sexual dysfunction because of some of these devices," he said.
It was a "regulatory failure that so many individual women were damaged".
"The TGA (Therapeutic Goods Administration) takes great care when it looks at new medicines entering the market, but I don't think they are resourced to take the same care with devices. We would like to see them use the same blowtorch on devices as applies to medicines," he said.
Perth woman Jeanette McKinnon, who said she "wanted to vomit" several weeks ago when a specialist confirmed she was implanted with at least two mesh devices at the Bentley public hospital in 2004 and 2005, allegedly without her knowledge or consent, was outraged when told of the AMA's involvement.
"I'm absolutely horrified. I'm so angry I'm shaking. That this has been allowed to go on, and the AMA's been involved. How dare they? We're human beings," Mrs McKinnon said.
The IVS Tunneller device was developed during experiments on 13 large dogs in 1987 by inventor Dr Peter Petros and other Royal Perth Hospital doctors.
A WA East Metropolitan Health Service spokesperson confirmed Royal Perth Hospital approved a research study in 1989 into the IVS device and procedure. It was granted standard clinical practice status by the hospital's ethics committee in 1993.
A Medical Journal of Australia report in July, 1994 acknowledged many doctors were critical of the procedure.
In February 2001, only two months before the IVS Tunneller was cleared for use in America as an incontinence and prolapse device, the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons found there was "no peer-reviewed, good quality evidence available to determine the safety and efficacy of the IVS procedure to treat women's incontinence". There was no assessment of its use to treat prolapse.
In a paper in 2003 called "Intravaginal Sling Distress", three Australian specialists, including Newcastle gynaecologist Alan Hewson and Brisbane gynaecologist Chris Maher, reported "disconcerting complications" in women after IVS surgery, including infections, pain syndromes and "symptoms debilitating to the patient's and partner's quality of life".
"Until further data on the safety and efficacy of the IVS procedures is available they cannot be recommended," they concluded.
A 2010 Melbourne Mercy Hospital for Women review of 10 years of pelvic mesh surgery found the IVS device had significantly higher rates of pain, mesh erosion and infection complication rates than eight other devices reviewed.
Dr Petros did not respond to Newcastle Herald questions.
In a paper in 2012 Dr Petros said his "early experimental studies" had been "wrongly" used as "an intellectual cornerstone to justify the use of mesh in prolapse surgery".
In the paper he distanced himself from the global mesh scandal, saying complications were related to "large sheet" mesh adopted by some companies, and not the small tapes advocated by him which preserved "vaginal elasticity".
In a submission to a Senate inquiry into pelvic mesh devices, which will hold its second public hearing in Perth on Friday, Dr Petros referenced his 1990 paper produced after trialling the Intravaginal Sling procedure on "13 female mongrel dogs", in association with Royal Perth Hospital and the University of Western Australia.

http://www.watoday.com.au/wa-news/australian-medical-association-president-confirms-ama-was-role-in-pelvic-mesh-scandal-20170822-gy1hzj.html


Monday, May 1, 2017

International #MeshAwarenessDay #LiveLifeMeshFree May 1, 2017

Joanne McCarthy

1 May 2017, 10:23 a.m.

A WOMAN who launched a campaign to support women victims of pelvic mesh and hold Australian health regulators to account has won two awards for consumer health advocacy.
Australian Pelvic Mesh Support Group founder Caz Chisholm received the Western Australian Health Consumers Council health consumers award and the Rosemary Caithness Award for outstanding service to health consumers after a campaign, supported by the Newcastle Herald, for a Senate inquiry into pelvic mesh.



Winner: Australian Pelvic Mesh Support Group founder Caz Chisholm with two health consumer awards received for her work since 2014 campaigning for victims of pelvic mesh.

Ms Chisholm’s group jumped from 39 members in early 2015 to more than 600 by Thursday when she received the awards, only days before International Mesh Awareness Day on Monday, May 1. The day was initiated by mesh support groups in countries including Australia, America, New Zealand, Great Britain and European countries including the Netherlands. In America alone more than 125,000 women have initiated legal action against mesh manufacturers after they were implanted with transvaginal mesh (surgery through the vagina rather than the abdomen) after post-childbirth complications.
An American woman on Friday was awarded $20 million compensation for complications after mesh surgery in 2007 using a Johnson & Johnson transvaginal mesh. In Australia 450 women have joined a class action against Johnson & Johnson, another 350 women have joined a class action against a second American device manufacturer, and more than 1000 women in total have complained of serious injuries after mesh surgery.
Ms Chisholm said she was “thrilled and honored to receive these awards as this represents the acknowledgement of all women suffering from the devastating effects of mesh”.
“What we seek first and foremost is recognition of our pain and suffering because most of us have been ignored by doctors, and when we do present with complications we are told they are caused by anything other than mesh,” Ms Chisholm said.
“Yet when women join the support group and they read about the same complications as others, they breathe a sign of relief and often cry because finally they have the recognition that they are not imagining their pain and they are not going crazy.
“They realise their pain is real and their pain is from mesh.”
Western Australian Health Consumers Council executive director Pip Brennan said Ms Chisholm’s double win of the two most prestigious consumer health awards recognised her tireless advocacy for mesh victims and outstanding work on giving them a voice.
“The use of mesh is now the subject of a federal Senate inquiry, which is taking submissions until May 31, and the inquiry’s title is ‘Number of women in Australia who have had transvaginal mesh implants and related matters’. This highlights that we simply don’t know how many women have had these implants, and how many of them have suffered complications,” Ms Brennan said.
“Caz Chisholm has spent significant time and energy raising awareness for women about the issue and providing essential peer support. She was also directly responsible for ensuring that the Senate inquiry was successfully advocated by Senator Derryn Hinch.”
In 2016 Australia’s peak health regulator for medical devices, the Therapeutic Goods Administration, quietly placed on its website a list of at least 30 known complications following pelvic mesh surgery, after TGA executives met with Ms Chisholm and other support group members.

The complications include punctures of vessels, nerves, structures or organs including the bladder, urethra or bowel; foreign body response including erosion of mesh into the vagina, bladder or bowel; chronic infections; acute or chronic pain; pain during intercourse; temporary or permanent inability to void via the lower urinary tract; bleeding; chronic pain in the groin, thigh, leg or abdomen; atypical vaginal discharge; exposed mesh may cause pain to the patient’s partner during intercourse and abscess.   

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

AU "living nightmare" with J&J Prolift pelvic mesh!



April 13, 2016 - 8:15PM

Joanne McCarthy (FiDA highlights)

EXCLUSIVE

Five years ago Gai Thompson warned Australia's peak health bodies of a looming disaster involving women receiving mesh device implants to treat common problems after pregnancy, birth and hysterectomies.
This week Mrs Thompson and others are speaking publicly for the first time as they plan a rally in Canberra and call for a formal inquiry into the health regulators and medical bodies they say have failed them.
They are the women who, in many cases, can no longer have sex, have lost their jobs, have had to mortgage or sell their homes, have travelled overseas for surgery to remove the mesh, have suffered excruciating chronic pain, are resistant to some antibiotics because of chronic infections, and have suffered in isolation and silence – often for years.

"We've lost so much that I can't believe in this day and age this can happen to women, that our lives are being destroyed and no one cares," Mrs Thompson said.


In America tens of thousands of mesh victims have taken manufacturers and doctors to court and been awarded damages of up to $12.5 million. In Australia the response from women has been slower because of fewer numbers and isolation, but it is growing, says Australian Pelvic Mesh Support Group founder Caz Chisholm.
A planned rally by her group in Canberra in late May will target one of Australia's peak health regulators, the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA), which approved the first of more than 40 different mesh devices for transvaginal (through the vagina) surgery to treat prolapse in 2005. Prolapse is where pelvic muscles and ligaments are weakened after pregnancy, birth or hysterectomy.
The TGA approved the devices despite no evidence of their safe use in prolapse cases and clear warnings in 2003 of the need for controlled trials on related mesh devices.
Eleven years later, in a letter to a patient advocate in 2014, the TGA conceded its assessment process for mesh devices had not been "mature" and lacked "rigour". The letter coincided with belated TGA action requiring clinical evidence from manufacturers of the safety and efficacy of transvaginal mesh devices.
Mrs Thompson's life after mesh surgery in February, 2008, is reduced to a one-page incident report on the TGA website.
She is the woman whose adverse event report to the TGA in October, 2011 about the Johnson & Johnson Prolift mesh device, noted she could no longer have sex and her life after February, 2008 had become "a living nightmare".
The report noted multiple urinary tract infections leaving her resistant to some antibiotics, chronic and severe pelvic pain, chronic bowel problems, incontinence, multiple areas where the mesh had eroded into her vagina, and that she was unable to stand for any length of time, suffered constant fatigue and stress, and had needed successive surgeries and treatments.
She was unable to work and as a consequence she and her husband had been forced to sell their home, Mrs Thompson said.
It took almost exactly three years for the TGA to complete its investigation of Mrs Thompson's October, 2011 complaint, until it placed her adverse event report on its website in October, 2014.
This week she said she first contacted the TGA by phone in 2010, after two years of seeing different medical specialists to deal with the consequences of the surgery.
"You don't know where to complain when something like this happens. When I first phoned the TGA they said they'd had no other complaints. I kept ringing them. I kept saying to them 'What else have I got to do to get you to do something'?" she said.
"They just kept saying sorry, but I was the only complaint they had."
A Senate inquiry into Australia's health care complaints processes will consider a submission by a patient advocate arguing the complaints process has spectacularly failed women given transvaginal mesh devices to treat prolapse surgery.
While it is mandatory for manufacturers to report adverse events to the TGA, they have to be made aware of any adverse events experienced by women. The TGA has confirmed it is not mandatory for doctors to report adverse events experienced by patients.
Ms Chisholm and Mrs Thompson say the majority of women were completely unaware they could complain to the TGA, or even that mesh was classed as a "device" that came under the TGA.
When Mrs Thompson was told three or four years ago that she had irreversible nerve damage in her pelvis because of the mesh, she was advised she could try morphine patches to cope with the pain.
She rejected the idea. Her life is about managing pain and the stress that flows from it.
"I can't get up and down steps. I can't go out for a walk. I feel like I have barbed wire in my pelvis and every time I move it causes me pain," she said.
"To have one day pain free, when you've had years and years of chronic pain, is something I can't even imagine now."
The Therapeutic Goods Administration said it started monitoring urogynaecological meshes in 2008, with a review in 2010 that found complications were closely linked to the skill and training of surgeons.
By August 2014 after a clinical review it reassessed the clinical evidence for devices and took action against some manufacturers, including the cancellation of devices.
In a statement to the Newcastle Herald the TGA said it had strengthened its oversight of new applications for mesh approvals, including conducting its own clinical assessment of the evidence rather than relying solely on European approvals as the basis for approval in Australia.
Johnson & Johnson was contacted for comment.
Newcastle Herald
http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/weve-lost-so-much-senate-urged-to-act-on-failures-over-mesh-device-implants-20160413-go5obe.html