The Palm Beach Post

Powder jury awards $4.69 billion

Johnson & Johnson ordered to pay damages to women who say products caused cancer.

- By Lindsey Bever Washington Post

A jury in Missouri ordered Johnson & Johnson to pay $4.69 billion in damages to 22 women who claim the company’s talcum powder products caused ovarian cancer.

Following an eight-hour deliberati­on Thursday, jurors awarded the women $550 million in compensato­ry damages and another $4.14 billion in punitive damages, their attorney, Mark Lanier, said in a news release. At issue were claims that the pharmaceut­ical giant sold powder products that were contaminat­ed with asbestos — once a pollutant in talc that has been linked to lung cancer — though there is much debate about whether talcum powder can lead to ovarian cancer.

Johnson & Johnson said in a statement that it is “deeply disappoint­ed in the verdict.”

“Johnson & Johnson remains confident that its products do not contain asbestos and do not cause ovarian cancer and intends to pursue all available appellate remedies,” it said. “Every verdict against Johnson & Johnson in this court that has gone through the appeals process has been reversed and the multiple errors present in this trial were worse than those in the prior trials.”

For decades, talcum powder has been used on babies. Women sometimes use it, particular­ly on genital areas to absorb moisture.

According to the complaint filed last year in the Circuit Court of the city of St. Louis, the women routinely used Johnson’s Baby Powder and Shower to Shower, an absorbent body powder, to “dust their perineum for feminine hygiene purposes.”

They said they later developed ovarian cancer.

Following Thursday’s ruling, the women’s lawyer said that the case led to the first talc-and asbestos-included ovarian cancer verdict in the United States.

“For over 40 years, Johnson & Johnson has covered up the evidence of asbestos in their products,” Lanier said. “We hope this verdict will get the attention of the J&J board and that it will lead

them to better inform the medical community and the public about the connection between asbestos, talc, and ovarian cancer. The company should pull talc from the market before causing further anguish, harm, and death from a terrible disease.

“J&J sells the same powders in a marvelousl­y safe corn starch variety. If J&J insists on continuing to sell talc, they should mark it with a serious warning.”

But Johnson & Johnson said in its statement that the trial was “a fundamenta­lly unfair process,” noting most of the women were not from Missouri, where the testimonie­s were heard. The company added that the verdict “which awarded the exact same amounts to all plaintiffs irrespecti­ve of their individual facts, and difference­s in applicable law, reflects that the evidence in the case was simply overwhelme­d by the prejudice of this type of proceeding.”

As The Washington Post has reported, there is a debate about whether talcum powder can cause ovarian cancer, with many experts, including government researcher­s, contending the evidence is thin.

Talc is a mineral used in cosmetics and personal-care products. According to the American Cancer Society, in its natural form, it may contain asbestos, which, when inhaled, may cause cancer in the lungs. However, there are questions about whether asbestos-free talc, which is the form used in modern-day products, poses a similar risk, according to the associatio­n. Regarding ovarian cancer, in particular, the American Cancer Society states that studies have shown mixed results, “with some studies reporting a slightly increased risk and some reporting no increase.”

“For any individual woman, if there is an increased risk, the overall increase is likely to very be small,” it said.

Experts agree that more research needs to be done.

 ?? AP ?? Johnson’s baby powder, one of the products alleged to cause cancer in women.
AP Johnson’s baby powder, one of the products alleged to cause cancer in women.

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