Tabletop Fire Pit Lawsuit Individuals who suffered severe burns, or families who lost a loved one in a tabletop fire pit explosion, may be eligible for financial compensation through a fire pit injury lawsuit.
Hair Relaxer Lawsuit Regular exposure to chemicals in hair relaxer may cause uterine cancer, ovarian cancer and other injuries. Women diagnosed with cancer may be eligible for settlement benefits.
Depo-Provera Lawsuit Depo-Provera lawsuits are being investigated for women who developed meningioma brain tumors after receiving Depo-Provera birth control shots, claiming that Pfizer failed to adequately disclose side effects.
Nitrous Oxide Lawsuit Individuals who suffered harm, or families who lost a loved one after using nitrous oxide products may be eligible for financial compensation through a nitrous oxide lawsuit.
Sports Betting Addiction Lawsuit Sports betting addiction lawsuits are being investigated for college students and young adults who developed gambling problems after using apps like FanDuel and DraftKings, alleging that the platforms failed to warn about the addictive nature of their features and marketing practices.
Ozempic Lawsuit Lawyers are pursuing Ozempic lawsuits, Wegovy lawsuits and Mounjaro lawsuits over gastroparesis or stomach paralysis, which can leave users with long-term gastrointestinal side effects
Suboxone Tooth Decay Lawsuit Lawsuits are being pursued by users of Suboxone who experienced tooth loss, broken teeth or required dental extractions. Settlement benefits may be available.
Change Healthcare Lawsuit Lawyers are reviewing Change Healthcare class action lawsuits for individuals who had their personal information stolen due to the data breach.
Bard PowerPort Lawsuit Serious and life-threatening injuries have been linked to problems with Bard PowerPort. Lawsuits are now being pursued by individuals who suffered injuries from the implantable port catheter fracturing or migrating.
AngioDynamics Port Catheter Lawsuit Serious and life-threatening injuries have been linked to problems with Bard PowerPort. Lawsuits are now being pursued by individuals who suffered injuries from the implantable port catheter fracturing or migrating.
House “Orphan” Drug Law Proposal Criticized In Public Citizen Report December 14, 2015 Irvin Jackson Add Your Comments A prominent consumer watchdog group, Public Citizen, warns that pending legislation contains provisions that could allow drug manufacturers to repurpose medications for uses they were never intended to treat, potentially resulting in billions in added costs for taxpayers through inflated drug prices and health care costs. On December 8, Public Citizen released an analysis(PDF) of provisions regarding what are known as “orphan” drugs in the proposed 21st Century Cures Act, a controversial bill proposed in the House that would relax a number of regulations and allow pharmaceutical companies to get drugs to the market with significantly less FDA oversight. According to the report, the bill would give manufacturers an additional six months of patent protection, preventing generic competition for drugs that are repurposed to treat rare, low-population diseases, known as “orphan” diseases. The report estimates that the orphan drug provision would cost U.S. taxpayers up to $12 billion over 10 years, and expose them to drugs and potential side effects that may not safely or effectively treat rare diseases. Do You Know about… SPORTS BETTING ADDICTION LAWSUITS FOR YOUNG ADULTS Gambling addiction and severe financial losses have been linked to popular sports betting platforms like DraftKings, FanDuel, and Caesars. Lawsuits are being filed by young adults and students who were targeted by deceptive promotions, addictive app features, and aggressive marketing tactics. See if you qualify for a sports betting addiction lawsuit. Learn More SEE IF YOU QUALIFY FOR COMPENSATION Do You Know About… SPORTS BETTING ADDICTION LAWSUITS FOR YOUNG ADULTS Gambling addiction and severe financial losses have been linked to popular sports betting platforms like DraftKings, FanDuel, and Caesars. Lawsuits are being filed by young adults and students who were targeted by deceptive promotions, addictive app features, and aggressive marketing tactics. See if you qualify for a sports betting addiction lawsuit. Learn More SEE IF YOU QUALIFY FOR COMPENSATION “Such a gift to the pharmaceutical industry is hardly necessary at a time when investment in orphan drugs is already soaring,” the report notes. “Moreover, the new law would exacerbate current patterns of orphan drug development, which already results in the approval of far too many non-innovative, poorly tested drugs and would open the door to gaming and abuse of the system. And worse, it involves depriving patients with more common diseases of cheaper generic medicines for an additional six months.” The Public Citizen report comes on the heels of a report by researchers at Johns Hopkins, which found that pharmaceutical companies are “gaming the system” in regards to the Orphan Drug Act, which is meant to provide fast-track the approval for drugs designed to treat deadly conditions that only impact a limited population. Instead, Johns Hopkins researchers warn that the law is being used to approve mainstream blockbuster drugs that are then promoted and prescribed for uses never approved by the FDA. Researchers say that in 2014, 41% of new drugs approved by the FDA were introduced via the Orphan drug law. Many of these drugs move on to become blockbusters, with more than $1 billion in sales. However, the law, originally approved in 1983, was meant to help drug manufacturers introduce medications that would otherwise be unprofitable, granting special patent protections and a faster route to the market, in situations where they would help 200,000 patients or less. The law grants the drug seven years market exclusivity, tax breaks in the millions, and waives the millions of dollars of marketing application fees. According to Public Citizen, the proposed 21st Century Cures Act goes even further, allowing drug makers whose blockbuster medications are facing loss of patent protection and generic competition to apply for approval to treat rare diseases, which would grant them six more months of exclusivity. In addition, many critics say that the legislation already weakens the process the FDA uses to approve new drugs by allowing the agency to consider applications for drug approvals that do not involve clinical trials, considered the gold standard of scientific drug testing, and instead allowing other, less rigorous testing methods by pharmaceutical companies to be used to get new drugs on the market quickly and more cheaply. Those drugs, according to Public Citizen and other critics, would likely cost patients and the health care system even more. “Higher prices are the other major driver of the greater returns for orphan drugs,” the Public Citizen report notes. “In 2014, most orphan drugs cost patients at least $98,534 per year, the corresponding annual cost of a non-orphan drug was $5,153.” 21st Century Cures Act Concerns Consumer advocates have previously raised concerns that the FDA is not adequately protecting patients from dangerous drugs and medical devices, often failing to require stringent premarket studies to identify dangerous side effects or defects before the wide use of new treatments. Despite questions about the latitude already provided to manufacturers, the 21st Century Cures Act would further loosen the approval process by allowing the agency to approve drugs and medical devices that have not had clinical trials, critics warn. Public Citizen points out that one part of the bill, Section 2222, would allow new high-risk medical devices to be approved by the FDA based only on case studies or medical journal articles, as opposed to double-blind clinical trials, which are the gold-standard for scientific review. The group says the law would basically allow the approval of potentially life-saving or life-threatening medical devices based solely on anecdotes. The group also warns that Section 2121 of the bill would lower standards for the approval of antibiotic and antifungal medications, giving a fast-track pathway for approval that, at best, would require only early-stage clinical trials, instead of the larger, later-stage clinical trials which require testing on a large number of patients, and which are generally presumed to be better at detecting potentially dangerous drug side effects. The bill comes amid a push for drug companies to release clinical trial data following incidents of ghost-writing and study-tampering that has involved powerful drugs that were later approved by the FDA. Independent researchers warn that in some cases it appears the agency was outright lied to about adverse events and effectiveness of drugs in company-sponsored clinical trials. In February, a study found that the FDA was finding evidence of clinical trial fraud, but not reporting it in most cases. Supporters of the bill say more flexibility in the FDA approval requirements is necessary to speed up the process of getting vital drugs to patients in a timely manner. Written by: Irvin Jackson Senior Legal Journalist & Contributing Editor Irvin Jackson is a senior investigative reporter at AboutLawsuits.com with more than 30 years of experience covering mass tort litigation, environmental policy, and consumer safety. He previously served as Associate Editor at Inside the EPA and contributes original reporting on product liability lawsuits, regulatory failures, and nationwide litigation trends. Tags: Clinical Trials, Congress More Lawsuit Stories PFAS Water Contamination Map Shows States With Highest ‘Forever Chemicals’ August 22, 2025 Sterile Saline Solution Infection Lawsuit Set for Trial Over Nurse Assist Recall August 22, 2025 Breast Implant Lymphoma Risk May Extend Beyond ALCL, Researchers Warn August 22, 2025 0 Comments Share Your CommentsFirst Name*Last NameEmail* Shared Comments*This field is hidden when viewing the formI authorize the above comments be posted on this page Yes No Post Comment I authorize the above comments be posted on this page Weekly Digest Opt-In Yes, send me a weekly email with the latest lawsuits, recalls and warnings. Want your comments reviewed by a lawyer?To have an attorney review your comments and contact you about a potential case, provide your contact information below. This will not be published.Contact Phone #Alt Phone #Private CommentsNOTE: Providing information for review by an attorney does not form an attorney-client relationship.CAPTCHAGA SourceGA CampaignGA MediumGA ContentGA TermLinkedInThis field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged. Δ MORE TOP STORIES PFAS Water Contamination Map Shows States With Highest ‘Forever Chemicals’ (Posted: today) New testing has identified states with the highest levels of cancer-linked PFAS contamination in drinking water, following decades of unregulated use and disposal of firefighting foam and industrial chemicals by the U.S. military and other industries. MORE ABOUT: AFFF FOAM AND PFAS WATER CONTAMINATION LAWSUITLawyers Must File AFFF and PFAS Lawsuits by September 5, or Face New Requirements in MDL (08/19/2025)Firefighters’ PFAS Side Effects May Include Genetic Changes Linked to Cancer, Other Diseases: Study (08/18/2025)AFFF Injury Lawyers Seek Reappointment to Leadership Roles in Federal MDL (08/08/2025) Tabletop Fire Pit Burn Victims Share Stories of Explosions and Devastating Injuries (Posted: yesterday) Victims and families are speaking out after a wave of tabletop fire pit explosions left people with severe burns, permanent injuries, and in some cases, claimed lives. MORE ABOUT: TABLETOP FIRE PIT LAWSUITColsen Fire Pit Lawsuit Involving Severe Burn Injuries Suffered by a Child Set for Trial Next Year (08/14/2025)Alcohol Fire Pit Recall Lawsuits Are Being Filed Over Severe Burn Injuries and Fatalities (08/07/2025) Experts Weigh In On Depo-Provera Brain Tumor Risks, As Lawsuits Continue to Mount (Posted: 2 days ago) A neurosurgeon and a personal injury lawyer weigh in on new evidence linking Depo-Provera to brain tumors, as lawsuits mount against Pfizer over failure to warn about meningioma risks. MORE ABOUT: DEPO-PROVERA LAWSUITWoman Will Need Lifelong Monitoring After Depo-Provera Brain Tumor: Lawsuit (08/13/2025)Depo-Provera Brain Tumor Caused Numbness Over Half of Woman’s Body, Lawsuit Alleges (08/01/2025)Depo-Provera MDL Judge Pushes for Meningioma Lawsuits To Be Filed Quicker (07/25/2025)
PFAS Water Contamination Map Shows States With Highest ‘Forever Chemicals’ (Posted: today) New testing has identified states with the highest levels of cancer-linked PFAS contamination in drinking water, following decades of unregulated use and disposal of firefighting foam and industrial chemicals by the U.S. military and other industries. MORE ABOUT: AFFF FOAM AND PFAS WATER CONTAMINATION LAWSUITLawyers Must File AFFF and PFAS Lawsuits by September 5, or Face New Requirements in MDL (08/19/2025)Firefighters’ PFAS Side Effects May Include Genetic Changes Linked to Cancer, Other Diseases: Study (08/18/2025)AFFF Injury Lawyers Seek Reappointment to Leadership Roles in Federal MDL (08/08/2025)
Tabletop Fire Pit Burn Victims Share Stories of Explosions and Devastating Injuries (Posted: yesterday) Victims and families are speaking out after a wave of tabletop fire pit explosions left people with severe burns, permanent injuries, and in some cases, claimed lives. MORE ABOUT: TABLETOP FIRE PIT LAWSUITColsen Fire Pit Lawsuit Involving Severe Burn Injuries Suffered by a Child Set for Trial Next Year (08/14/2025)Alcohol Fire Pit Recall Lawsuits Are Being Filed Over Severe Burn Injuries and Fatalities (08/07/2025)
Experts Weigh In On Depo-Provera Brain Tumor Risks, As Lawsuits Continue to Mount (Posted: 2 days ago) A neurosurgeon and a personal injury lawyer weigh in on new evidence linking Depo-Provera to brain tumors, as lawsuits mount against Pfizer over failure to warn about meningioma risks. MORE ABOUT: DEPO-PROVERA LAWSUITWoman Will Need Lifelong Monitoring After Depo-Provera Brain Tumor: Lawsuit (08/13/2025)Depo-Provera Brain Tumor Caused Numbness Over Half of Woman’s Body, Lawsuit Alleges (08/01/2025)Depo-Provera MDL Judge Pushes for Meningioma Lawsuits To Be Filed Quicker (07/25/2025)