Business Standard

Redress for faulty J&J hip implants unlikely

Experts claim law does not make compensati­on compulsory

- VEENA MANI

Patients who have filed complaints against Johnson & Johnson for allegedly giving them faulty hip implants are unlikely to get any easy relief soon.

State government­s and the Centre have not hauled up the company in the eight years since the first complaint was lodged. Even if they were to do so now, they are unlikely to be able to make the device maker cough up compensati­on. The Drugs and Cosmetics (D&C) Act, 1940, which regulates medical devices, does not expressly provide for compensati­on.

Johnson & Johnson did not respond to queries on this. The first complaint was lodged in Maharashtr­a in 2011. The state's food and drug administra­tion (FDA) took it up actively. An FIR was filed in 2014, naming DePuy Synthes, a subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson. But, the authoritie­s could not push for compensati­on. The case went to the Bombay High Court. The court advised the FDA to continue with the inquiry, but nothing happened.

The D&C allows the FDA to ask a company to recall its faulty products. But, Johnson & Johnson did not do so in India.

"All over the country, 4,700 hip implants were used till 2010. It was not a problem of the batches sold in Mumbai only," said an official involved in the Maharashtr­a investigat­ion. "The FDA chief of Maharashtr­a appealed to all chief commission­ers to take action in their states. But, that did not happen." The official claimed that when the Maharashtr­a FDA asked the company to identify and locate affected patients in order to ensure corrective surgeries, Johnson & Johnson said that doing so would be impossible. Business Standard could not verify this independen­tly.

A committee was set up in 2017 by the Union health ministry to review the matter. In February this year, the committee submitted its report. It said the company should pay each patient ~2 million as compensati­on, but no one has received any money, according to various reports. In the US, Johnson & Johnson had paid $2.5 billion for the same problem.

Even the recommenda­tions of the committee are not enough to make the company pay compensati­on. In the US, aggrieved individual­s used a specific product-liability law to seek damages and compensati­on. Similar provisions are not available under the D&C Act. The Consumer Protection Act, 1986, provides a generic legal option. “Earlier there were discussion­s to amend the D&C Act to bring in specific provisions for compensati­on but that has not happened,” said Malini Aisola, convenor, All Indian Drug Action Network (AIDAM).

She added, “But, there are enough powers with the Central Drugs Standard Control Organisati­on (CDSCO) to act proactivel­y, withdraw faulty devices from the market, inform the patients and make companies act responsibl­y. Instead, the organisati­on depends on companies to declare the issues themselves.”

Aisola said this was not the case only with hip implants. “Even in the case of dangerous stents, the CDSCO did not act. It was the National Pharmaceut­ical Pricing Authority that stepped in laterally to push the defective stents out of the Indian market.” Senior CDCSO officials did not respond.

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