Thursday, January 17, 2013

Indiana AG files licensing complaint against NECC


INDIANAPOLIS (Legal Newsline) – Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller filed a licensing lawsuit Wednesday against the Massachusetts-based pharmacy that is linked to an outbreak of meningitis that killed 37 people across 19 states.
Zoeller
In November, Indiana’s Board of Pharmacy voted to indefinitely suspend the non-resident pharmacy license of the New England Compound Center. The formal licensing complaint will be considered by the board at its February 11 meeting to determine punitive measures.
“This pharmacy failed to ensure its epidural steroid injections were safe for patients which led to devastating harm,” Zoeller said. “This formal licensing complaint against the New England Compounding Center will soon be considered by the Indiana Board of Pharmacy which has the authority to determine the appropriate discipline.”
There were a total of 568 cases and 37 deaths across 19 states as a result of the fungal meningitis stemming from epidural steroid injections produced by NECC. As of Dec. 12, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had identified six deaths and 63 cases in Indiana alone.
In September, the CDC and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration identified NECC as the compounding pharmacy that produced the injections. Subsequently, NECC ceased production of the steroid injections and initiated a recall of the drugs.
As a licensed non-resident pharmacy distributing and selling products in Indiana, NECC is legally responsible for safe and proper storage and distribution of devices and drugs.
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1 comment:

Kenneth Woliner, MD said...

Big wHoop. This pharmacy is already dead. It is in bankruptcy, and its liability policy won't cover any of the claims against it because the insurance doesn't cover "manufacturing", which the pharmacy clealy was doing. Now if the Indiana Attorney General was also filing a CRIMINAL COMPLAINT against all the pharmacy owners and supervising pharmacists, with the threat of JAIL TIME, then this article would be a story worth noting. Right now, it is just another state that will revoke the license of a pharmacy that will never re-open, and any fines issued by this state licensing board will go unpaid.