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    Mass. girl, parents awarded $63M in Motrin lawsuit

    Mass. teenager who lost skin after adverse reaction to Motrin awarded $50M, parents get $13M

    BOSTON (AP) -- Health care company Johnson & Johnson has been told to pay a teenager and her parents $63 million after she suffered a life-threatening drug reaction and lost most of her skin when she took a children's pain reliever nearly a decade ago.

    Johnson & Johnson and its McNeil-PPC Inc. subsidiary should pay Samantha Reckis and her parents a total of $109 million, including interest, a Plymouth Superior Court jury decided on Wednesday.

    Samantha was 7 when she was given Motrin brand ibuprofen, family attorney Brad Henry said. She suffered a rare side effect known as toxic epidermal necrolysis and lost 90 percent of her skin and was blinded, he said.

    She suffered brain damage that "thankfully" involved only short-term memory loss, he said, and surgeons had to drill through her skull to relieve some pressure.

    The disease also seared Samantha's respiratory system, and she now has just 20 percent lung capacity, Henry said.

    The family filed the lawsuit in January 2007, claiming that Samantha was blinded by Motrin and alleging that Johnson & Johnson failed to warn consumers that the drug could cause life-threatening reactions. The five-week trial ended on Wednesday when the jury awarded $50 million in compensatory damages to Samantha and $6.5 million to each of her parents.

    Samantha, now 16 years old, had previously taken Motrin without suffering any side effects. Her parents began giving her the medication to reduce fever that began the day after Thanksgiving in 2003. The resulting toxic epidermal necrolysis — a potentially fatal skin disease that inflames the mucus membranes and eyes and is marked by a rash that burns off the outer layer of skin — puzzled physicians. It inflamed Samantha's throat, mouth, eyes, esophagus, intestinal tract, respiratory system and reproductive system, forcing physicians to put her in a coma.

    The McNeil unit of Johnson & Johnson Services Inc., which is based in New Brunswick, N.J., said it disagreed with the verdict and was considering additional legal options.

    "The Reckis family has suffered a tragedy, and we sympathize deeply with them," it said in a statement.

    But the firm sought to defend Children's Motrin, saying it is "labeled appropriately" and when used as directed is "a safe and effective treatment option for minor aches and pains and fever."

    "A number of medicines, including ibuprofen, have been associated with allergic reactions and as noted on the label, consumers should stop using medications and immediately contact a healthcare professional if they have an allergic reaction," it said in the statement.

    Samantha, who lives in Plymouth, is an honor student but has to work twice as hard as other students to retain the same amount of information, Henry said. She doesn't want to let her plight hold her down, he said.

    In a similar case in Pennsylvania, a girl was awarded $10 million in 2011 after an adverse reaction to Children's Motrin caused her to lose 84 percent of her skin, suffer brain damage and go blind.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Denise Lavoie contributed to this report.

    ___

    Rodrique Ngowi can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/ngowi

    301 comments

    • Randy  •  1 day 17 hrs ago
      What happened to this girl is absolutely horrible but I'm having trouble understanding how the company could have anticipated this. Especially since she had taken it before without issue. The problem with these articles is that they tell us the end result but they don't give us any of the expert testimony which would have convinced a jury to award them money
      • James 13 hrs ago
        The short version of what happened to this girl is called TEN's. Genetic factors are suspected in drug-induced blistering disorders, and blood relatives of the patient also should not use the suspected drug. So her family can be in trouble as well.
    • TJN  •  2 days 8 hrs ago
      Every wonder way we don;t see large settlements against china owned industries?
    • J D  •  1 day 12 hrs ago
      All medications can cause debilitating side effects or death and this is indicated in the papers that comes in the box. I have a family member who is allergic to aspirin. Should a drug maker be liable for such rare cases when there wasn't any negligence? That's debatable I guess. My mother had a similar reaction to antibiotics once...Stevens Johnson Syndrome, but I we had read the labeling and knew immediately to stop the medication and contact her doctor, who hospitalized her. She spent three days in the hospital and was still bleeding internally when they released her. It took her two months to recover, thankfully with no lasting effects. Had we not caught it so soon it could have progressed to the condition this girl developed.
    • Shlumgullya  •  21 hrs ago
      Solution for the future : label every medicine with the following --- although this has been proven generally safe for consumption for 99.999% of all humans, you might suffer a rare allergic reaction leading to death or permanent disability. do not take or give to others if you feel you cannot accept the stated risk level, or the possible consequences of a sever or deadly allergic reaction beyond our control.
    • Greg  •  1 day 14 hrs ago
      While I certainly feel sorry for this girl, you can't eliminate all risk in life. People are injured falling in the shower all the time. Are we going to outlaw showers or sue people who make them? As a society we have to accept that bad thins happen sometimes and only punish those whose negligence causes others harm...otherwise nobody will be able to provide any products.
    • Ooferdog  •  1 day 10 hrs ago
      Hey, they put “WARNING: Not for oral use.” on tubes of Preparation H. Makes you wonder how far up someone's a/s\s the hemorrhoids were to think it would be a shorter route by swallowing.
    • GREGG  •  2 days 10 hrs ago
      If the side-effect was that rare, I smell an Appeal on the horizon.
    • Retirement-bound  •  2 days 9 hrs ago
      This should never have gone to trial, the girl had an allergic reaction that was unforeseen. This is an over-the-counter medication and this is what could possibly be the only such reaction ever seen after how many doses were sold world wide?
    • Michelle  •  1 day 13 hrs ago
      I feel for the poor girl, but sometimes in life, #$%$ happens. She had safely taken this product before. No way to predict someone, someday, somewhere, would suddenly have a rare reaction. No way the company should be blamed for this.
    • betterhalf9779  •  1 day 3 hrs ago
      While what happened to their daughter is tragic, no medication is 100% safe. Every medicine that goes into your body can cause a reaction. Sadly, many times there is no way to tell if you'll be allergic until it's too late. I can see them paying medical bills and $25M for care - but $109M (plus, according to the story) is outrageous and I hope the total is overturned on appeal. If you sue bc you had a reaction and claim it's the companies fault - you, are in fact, an idiot. Their medication doesn't say, "Will not cause ANY reaction in anybody EVER". Therefore, these parents need to look to fill their bank acct some other way.
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