Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Texas Spent $247K on Risperdal While Suing J&J

VIA Pharmagossip Texas Spent $247K on Risperdal While Suing J&J | NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth:

"The state won a $158 million settlement last month from a pharmaceutical company that the Texas attorney general said promoted an antipsychotic drug for uses not yet approved by federal regulators.

Attorney General Greg Abbott said
Johnson & Johnson marketed Risperdal as the drug of choice for children and the elderly for schizophrenia and dementia even though the Food and Drug Administration had not approved its use in children or the elderly.

Yet while the state was suing J&J, the
Texas Youth Commission, one of the state's largest purchasers of pharmaceuticals, prescribed it nearly 3,000 times to youth in the Texas prison system, according to financial documents uncovered by NBC 5.

The state's lawsuit, which was filed in 2006, said the state excessively paid pharmacies that dispensed prescriptions for Medicaid patients for a range of unapproved uses.

"Johnson & Johnson's scheme to profit from the
Medicaid program by overstating the safety and effectiveness of an expensive drug and improperly influencing officials ended up costing taxpayers millions of dollars," Abbott said in a statement after the settlement was reached.

"As part of the agreed settlement with the state of Texas, we do not admit liability or fault," said Teresa Mueller, a spokeswoman for J&J subsidiary Janssen Pharmaceuticals Inc.

In response to the attorney general's accusations that J&J schemed to profit from Medicaid, the company said it "is committed to ethical business practices and has policies in place to ensure its products are only promoted for their FDA-approved indications."

In 2007, a year after the lawsuit was filed, the FDA approved the drug for use in children and the elderly, but the state of Texas said it felt the financial damage had already been done.

The University of Texas Medical Branch, which is in charge of all medical care within the state's prison systems, spent
$247,666.87 buying Risperdal between 2006 and 2007.

TYC spokesman Jim Hurley said Risperdal was never really deemed unsafe for use but just did not have FDA approval."


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Click the
'boring old man at risperdal texas trial' label below for links to the retired psychiatrist's coverage of the trial--he attended.

1 comments:

Danny Haszard said...

Thousands of patients like myself were disabled or killed from the side effects of these 'a-typical' antipsychotics.
Few of us got compensated for our injuries.The lawyers on both sides of the aisle got to playout courtroom drama and make millions of dollars.
All I can do is blog about it.

Google Haszard Zyprexa