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1 posted on 10/16/2004 3:17:56 PM PDT by quidnunc
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To: quidnunc
If Bush gets re-elected he needs to tie the hands of the domestic terrorists known as trial lawyers. Our country will cease to exist if they continue to run society as they have been doing.
2 posted on 10/16/2004 3:21:38 PM PDT by atomicpossum (If there are two Americas, John Edwards isn't qualified to lead either of them.©)
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To: quidnunc

It also goes back to Hillary Clinton in her health care plan, which boiled down to the US buying vacines from other countries at a reduced price from what US was making it, and now those companies are losing money and are quiting making them.


3 posted on 10/16/2004 3:22:38 PM PDT by TexasTaysor
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To: quidnunc

Wasn't another factor a program established under the Clinton administration to help provide vaccines for children? The government bargained for large amounts at reduced prices and told the drug companies they couldn't charge more than a certain price--even if they lost money on the vaccines. So, the companies stopped making vaccines and the only alternative was for the U.S. to buy from foreign companies.

At least, that's what I heard on Rush last week.

Any confirmation of that?


4 posted on 10/16/2004 3:25:22 PM PDT by BibleDoc
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To: quidnunc

Excellent article. Funny how little I am seeing the cause of the vaccine problem mentioned in the press. In fact, I am seeing it is "Bush's fault for 'outsourcing' vaccine".

The rest of the article:

In 1967 there were 26 companies making vaccines in the United States. Today there are only four that make any type of vaccine and none making flu vaccine. Wyeth was the last to fall, dropping flu shots
after 2002. For recently emerging illnesses such as Lyme disease, there is no commercial vaccine, even though one has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration.

All this is the result of a legal concept called "liability without fault" that emerged from the hothouse atmosphere of the law schools in the 1960s and became the law of the land. Under the old "negligence" regime, you had to prove a product manufacturer had done something wrong in order to hold it liable for damages. Under liability without fault, on the other hand, the manufacturer can be held responsible for harm from its products, whether blameworthy or not. Add to that the jackpot awards that come from pain-and-suffering and punitive damages, and you have a legal climate that no manufacturer wants to risk.

In theory, prices might have been jacked up enough to make vaccine production profitable even with the lawsuit risk, but federal intervention made vaccines a low-margin business. Before 1993, manufacturers sold vaccines to doctors, doctors prescribed them to patients, and there was some markup. Then Congress adopted the Vaccine for Children Act, which made the government a monopsony buyer. The feds now purchase over half of all vaccines at a low fixed price and distribute them to doctors. This has essentially finished off the private market.

As recently as 1980, 18 American companies made eight different vaccines for various childhood diseases. Today, four companies--GlaxoSmithKline, Aventis, Merck, and Wyeth--make 12 vaccines. Of the 12, seven are made by only one company and only one is made by more than two. "There are constant shortages," says Dr. Paul Offit, head of the Vaccine Education Center at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. "With only one supplier for so many vaccines, the whole system is fragile. When even the smallest thing goes wrong, children miss their vaccinations."

The intersection between mass vaccinations and the tort system was bound to be messy. When you vaccinate enough people, someone, somewhere, is going to have a bad reaction. You could give a glass of milk to 100 million people and a few would inevitably get violently sick from it. With vaccines, there will be allergic reactions and a tiny but predictable percentage of people will suffer some kind of permanent damage or even die. Because of liability without fault and the generosity of the tort system, the result is huge damage awards.

The first instance of this came in 1955 with polio vaccinations. Cutter Laboratories, the California company that now distributes Cutter's Insect Repellent, made an early batch of vaccines, some of which had live viruses in them. Almost all the children in Idaho were administered the vaccine and several dozen contracted polio. In 1957, the parents of Anne Gottsdanker, an 8-year-old girl whose legs had become paralyzed, sued Cutter, with famed personal injury lawyer Melvin Belli representing them.

The jury found Cutter's actions were not negligent--the orders had been rushed, standards had not been clear, and safety precautions were still rudimentary at the time. But, using the new doctrine of liability without fault, the jury held Cutter accountable anyway and awarded $147,300. "That decision made Ralph Nader possible," Belli later claimed.

"It was a turning point," says Dr. Offit, whose book The Cutter Incident will be published next year. "Because of the Cutter decision, vaccines became one of the first medical products to

be eliminated by lawsuits."

That this would be the outcome wasn't immediately clear. Soon after the trial, the Yale Law Journal published an article arguing that insurance against adverse reactions was the solution. The public wouldn't buy policies because it would be too complicated and expensive, but vaccine makers could. Insurance would cover the cost of bad outcomes and the manufacturers would pass these costs on to their customers. Those few who were harmed by a vaccine would be covered by those who benefited. Everything would work out. Unfortunately, this thesis failed to anticipate how high damage awards would go.

WHEN AN UNUSUAL EPIDEMIC occurred at Fort Dix, N.J., in 1976, for example, the federal government decided to vaccinate the whole country against the new "swine flu." To the astonishment of Congress, the insurance companies refused to participate. Senator Ted Kennedy charged "cupidity" and "lack of social obligation." The Congressional Budget Office predicted that with 45 million Americans inoculated, there would be 4,500 injury claims and 90 damage awards, totaling $2 million. Congress decided to provide the insurance.

As Peter Huber recounts in his book Liability, the CBO's first estimate proved uncannily accurate. A total of 4,169 damage claims were filed. However, not 90 but more than 700 suits were successful and the total bill to Congress came to over $100 million, 50 times what the CBO had predicted. The insurance companies knew their business well.

Adding to the problem are the predictable panics about vaccines that spread among parents and are abetted by trial lawyers. In 1974, a British researcher published a paper claiming that the vaccine for pertussis (whooping cough) had caused seizures in 36 children, leading to 22 cases of epilepsy or mental retardation. Subsequent studies proved the claim to be false, but in the meantime Japan canceled inoculations, resulting in 113 preventable whooping cough deaths. In the United States, 800 pertussis vaccine lawsuits asking $21 million in damages were filed over the next decade. The cost of a vaccination went from 21 cents to $11.

Every American drug company dropped pertussis vaccine except Lederle Laboratories. In 1980, Lederle lost a liability suit for the paralysis of a three-month-old infant--even though there was almost no evidence implicating the vaccine. Lederle's damages were $1.1 million, more than half its gross revenues from sale of the vaccine for that entire year.

In recent years, the most prevalent anti-vaccine rumor has held that Thimerosal, a mercury-containing preservative used in vaccines from the 1930s until just recently, is behind an "epidemic of autism." Once again, scientific studies have disproved the allegation, but hundreds of parents are filing suit, and trial lawyers continue to troll for clients.

Congress tried to stave off liability problems with the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act in 1986. The program functions almost as an ideal "medical court," with panels of scientists, virologists, and statisticians reviewing each complaint and rewarding those that seem legitimate. Unfortunately, the program allows plaintiffs to opt out of the system. Trial lawyers continually bypass it and elect to go to trial--particularly for cases where the review looks unpromising. With Thimerosal, lawyers have argued that the law does not apply because mercury was an additive, not the actual vaccine. The result is jackpot awards and very little protection for the vaccine companies. In 1998, the FDA approved a vaccine for Lyme disease, which strikes 15,000 people a year. GlaxoSmithKline manufactured it for three years but quit when rumors began circulating that the vaccine caused arthritis.

All this has made the flu an epidemic waiting to happen. Each year flu viruses circle the globe, moving into Asia in the spring and summer and back to North America in the winter. Surface proteins change along the way so that the previous year's vaccine doesn't work against the following year's variation.

Each year in February, the Centers for Disease Control meets with the vaccine-makers--all two of them--and decides which strain of the virus to anticipate for next year. Then they both make the same vaccine. Last year the committee bet on the Panama strain, but a rogue "Fujian" strain suddenly emerged as a surprise invader. A mini-epidemic resulted and 93 children died, only two of them properly vaccinated.

With several companies competing in the field, as was once the case, somebody would have been more likely to produce a dark horse vaccine. If that rogue strain emerged, the dissenting company would hit the jackpot, and there would be ample supplies of an effective vaccine, at least for those most at risk. In the "planned economy" of the CDC, however, there is no back-up for an unexpected turn of events. This year there isn't even a front line.

Are trial lawyers ready to accept responsibility for their starring role in creating this health hazard? Don't hold your breath. "This is just the typical garbage and propaganda from the drug manufacturers," says Carlton Carl, spokesman for the Association of Trial Lawyers of America. "There's absolutely no disincentive for making vaccines. American companies don't do it for the same reason they're sending jobs overseas--because it increases their profits."

Whether doctors are quitting the profession because of an out-of-control tort system, whether malpractice premiums are the cause of health care increases--such hardy perennials of the litigation debate are still a subject of lively controversy. But with vaccines there is no argument. Trial lawyers have all but ruined the market. Yet they are still unwilling to take responsibility.

William Tucker is a fellow at the Discovery Institute. His book on trial lawyers, Civil Lynchings, will be published next year.


5 posted on 10/16/2004 3:26:33 PM PDT by I still care (America is not the problem - it is the solution..)
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To: quidnunc
There are actually two American manufacturers, and the majority of blame lies with Hitlary and her federal Vaccines for Children Program. This program effectively set price ceilings that priced many of the American manufacturers out of the market. A very good majority of our flu vaccines are coming from across the pond though; just not all.
6 posted on 10/16/2004 3:27:35 PM PDT by AuburnMan
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To: quidnunc

Good post.


7 posted on 10/16/2004 3:38:43 PM PDT by Former Proud Canadian (.)
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To: quidnunc

Without tort reform, many of us will be hard pressed to afford any health care. I guess the "John's" don't care if we get sick and die, because we'll still be able to cast a vote any way they like.


8 posted on 10/16/2004 3:44:00 PM PDT by hyperpoly8 (Illegitimati Non Carborundum)
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To: quidnunc

Too bad the mainstream press won't report why we now depend on foreign producers for vital vaccines.


9 posted on 10/16/2004 3:51:01 PM PDT by The Great RJ
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To: quidnunc
The congress had hearings on whether to protect vaccine manufacturers from lawsuits resulting from adverse reactions to vaccines.

The congress in it's wisdom decided that the pharmaceutical companies ought not have that protection.

Well, that meant that most of the companies refused to manufacture the vaccine.

To make matters worse, hillbilly decided that all childhood vaccines ought to be sold to the government at cost. They then stored the vaccines in improperly controlled warehouses and ALL the vaccines were ruined.

Fiasco after fiasco when the government gets involved and the congress decides to vote on the side of the trial lawyers.

10 posted on 10/16/2004 4:00:34 PM PDT by OldFriend (It's the soldier, not the reporter who has given US freedom of the press)
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To: quidnunc

One of the bottlenecks that compound the overall problem is that there has to be a considerable lead time in the preparation of the vaccine, plus there is an educated guess as to which specific virus strains will be the most prominent in this year's spread. Flu virus strains mutate frequently, which is why a vaccine against a particular strain a couple of years ago is virtually useless today.

The reason the production of flu vaccine was outsourced is because the liability costs for pharmaceutical companies far outweigh the expected revenue from sale of the vaccine. Nobody is going to produce any product for long at a loss, and subsidies are definitely not the answer.

Pay what is needed to get the job done now, or pay a much heavier price later, because if you need something badly enough, you will pay for it whether you buy it or not. It is curious that this financial axiom is apparently no longer widely known.


12 posted on 10/16/2004 4:02:22 PM PDT by alloysteel
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To: quidnunc
Statement: "La Grippe of the Trial Lawyers: Guess who's to blame for the flu vaccine fiasco."

Response: Yes the trial lawyers are a curse. However, they are only part of the problem. The main problem is the D*mn appellate judges. I wish people could grasp this overiding FACT! The trial lawyers can think up and present all the goofy arguments they wish. It takes an appellate judge to turn the goofy argument into a court order. Once you grasp this idea something might be done. It is the judiciary, followed by the legislatures responsible for the current litigation mess.

14 posted on 10/16/2004 4:16:27 PM PDT by AEMILIUS PAULUS (Further, the statement assumed)
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To: quidnunc

bttt


16 posted on 10/16/2004 4:41:35 PM PDT by BenLurkin (We have low inflation and and low unemployment.)
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To: quidnunc

He forgot to add in hillary's national child vaccine buy/push plan had a big part in the ALL vaccine shortage.


17 posted on 10/16/2004 4:46:27 PM PDT by GailA ( hanoi john, I'm for the death penalty for terrorist, before I impose a moratorium on it.)
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To: quidnunc

http://www.asapsolution.com/


Try a collodial silver solution to help fight off the flu and a bunch of other bacteria and infections.


19 posted on 10/16/2004 5:54:28 PM PDT by Chewbacca (You can go ahead and be a Pawn in the game of life. I'll be a Rook!)
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To: quidnunc
I didn't know this fact. Edwards and his ilk are responsible for much suffering in this country.

By the way, I already got my flu shot. My doctor offered it to me at the end of September, before this "problem" broke. Otherwise I would have been denied the right to get a flu shot, due to the severe restrictions on eligibility that have since been imposed.

21 posted on 10/16/2004 6:09:58 PM PDT by Ciexyz (At his first crisis, "President" Kerry will sail his Swiftboat to safety, then call Teddy.)
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To: quidnunc

The article is well worth reading.


23 posted on 10/16/2004 6:16:26 PM PDT by Ciexyz (At his first crisis, "President" Kerry will sail his Swiftboat to safety, then call Teddy.)
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To: quidnunc
This article should be posted at the few places still giving out the vaccine. The local news stations have been showing hundreds of seniors standing in line for hours to get the shot. When interviewed, they all blame the government [BUSH] for this mess.
24 posted on 10/16/2004 6:23:25 PM PDT by deadmenvote (Happiness is a warn gun and a x-tailgater)
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To: quidnunc
In medical literature, almost every year there is some article some where fretting over the "big bug" that many think is overdue, the kind that can be a big killer.

We are now a much more widely travelled public than we used to be, and we travel much more often overseas. Add to that massive uncontrolled immigration--and a sudden lack of flu vaccine.

At least, make sure every nurse is vaccinated.

25 posted on 10/16/2004 6:47:12 PM PDT by Mamzelle (Fast Eddie and Big Betty--let them sue McDonald's and leave us alone)
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