By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL
Published: November 17, 2012
RANDALL KINNAIRD’S legal clients had steroids
injected into their backs last summer for a wide range of reasons. Of the 25,
one got three shots in a two-month period when pain never totally disappeared.
Another got one as a preventive measure because she was going on a trip to
Europe and was worried that cobblestones would aggravate an old injury.
Now the 25 — or their survivors — have engaged Mr.
Kinnaird, one of Nashville’s leading lawyers, to sue the New England Compounding
Center. Three have died, one is paralyzed, several more are still hospitalized
and all suffer blinding headaches — victims of the meningitis
that resulted from vials of steroid medicine contaminated by fungus.
The New England Compounding Center certainly seems
deserving of its current status as the prime culprit in a tragic outbreak that
has killed 32 and sickened 438. The bottles of supposedly sterile steroid
medication it shipped were reportedly so tainted that white fuzz could be seen
floating in some vials.
But, experts say, the now notorious Compounding Center
has a nationwide network of unwitting enablers and accomplices: There are the
doctors who overprescribe an invasive back-pain therapy that, in studies, has
not proved useful for many of the patients who get it. And there are the
patients, living in an increasingly medicalized society, who want a quick fix
for life’s aches and pains.
The use of steroid injections to treat back pain has
skyrocketed in the past 15 years — out of proportion to growth in the number of
patients with back pain, or the aging of the population. The frequency of
steroid injections dispensed to Medicare
patients rose 121 percent from 1997 to 2006. Washington State found that the use
of back injections grew 12.6 percent between 2006 and 2009, at a cost to the
state of $56 million. Some people received more than 10 shots a year.
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