Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Women With Transvaginal Mesh Implants To Share $21.5 Million In Settlement

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Mar, 2020 08:26 PM

    TORONTO - A group of Canadian women who suffered ill-effects from implantation of a medical device called transvaginal mesh will receive a total of $21.5 million in compensation under a proposed class-action settlement, court records show.

     

    The settlement, between the women and Boston Scientific, involves about 325 women who received the implants. Their share of the money would depend on the severity of their medical issues.

     

    In approving the class definition and method for reaching out to class members, Ontario Superior Court Justice Paul Perell noted the settlement is similar to another recently approved class action involving the mesh. Final approval of the current action is expected in June.

     

    The net-like implants are used to treat conditions such as stress urinary incontinence or pelvic organ prolapse. The implants are designed to reinforce a weak vaginal wall or support the urethra or bladder neck. The polypropylene mesh is widely used. However, many recipients have had an array of serious side effects.

     

    Boston Scientific is the Canadian subsidiary of its Delaware-based parent and is the sole distributor of the company's transvaginal mesh devices in Canada. The product has been implanted in thousands of Canadian women.

     

    The lead plaintiff in the class action, Susan Vester, suffered painful complications from her implant. Court documents show she was given the device in January 2010 as a way to prevent incontinence — an operation about 25,000 women a year have in Canada.

     

    Among other complications, Vester said she suffered urinary problems, difficulty walking, emotional stress and pain during sexual intercourse. She argued she was unaware of the risks before the surgery and would have refused the procedure had she known.

     

    Vester and her husband sued Boston Scientific, alleging the devices were defective and unsafe. Among other things, they argued the mesh was negligently designed and sold, and that recipients had required intensive surgical interventions to try to alleviate the side-effects.

     

    The company maintained her complaints were the result of pre-existing medical conditions, not the mesh. It denied the product caused the problems about which the women complained.

     

    After initially refusing to do so in 2015, Perell certified the lawsuit as a class action in February 2017.

     

    "There is some basis in fact that the polypropylene mesh in each of Boston Scientific's transvaginal devices has a clinically significant deficiency," Perell wrote at the time. "Boston Scientific's arguments based on an alleged multiplicity of differences between the products, patients, and the complications, do not negate the commonality of the proposed common issues."

     

    The settlement also applies to about 20 or so women who've had the implants since the action was certified, and they have 60 days to opt out. Boston stopped selling the devices for treating pelvic organ prolapse last July.

     

    Daniel Bach, the Vesters' lawyer, said his clients were happy with the settlement, in which Boston Scientific admits no liability.

     

    "This agreement will enable members of the class to receive compensation for the injuries they allege," Bach said.

     

    In an earnings call last month, the U.S. company's chief financial officer said Boston was working to resolve litigation over the mesh. More than 95 per cent of known claims were settled or were in the final stages of settlement, Dan Brennan said. He said the company expected to pay US$115 million into settlement funds this year.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. First Nation Serves Eviction Notice To Company That Wants To Build Gas Pipeline

    B.C. First Nation Serves Eviction Notice To Company That Wants To Build Gas Pipeline
    VANCOUVER - A First Nation in British Columbia has served a company that wants to build a natural gas pipeline through its territory an eviction notice.    

    B.C. First Nation Serves Eviction Notice To Company That Wants To Build Gas Pipeline

    Late Night Burnaby Shooting, Car Crash Sends One To Hospital, Burnaby RCMP Investigating

    Burnaby RCMP’s Investigative Support Team is continuing to investigate a shooting that sent one man to hospital with non-life threatening injuries.  

    Late Night Burnaby Shooting, Car Crash Sends One To Hospital, Burnaby RCMP Investigating

    Sikh Couple Providing Free Meals To Victims Of Australia Bushfires

    Kamaljeet Kaur and her husband Kanwaljeet Singh have been preparing simple meals of curry and rice for the victims in their Desi Grill restaurant in Bairnsdale in Victoria for the last five days  

    Sikh Couple Providing Free Meals To Victims Of Australia Bushfires

    Police Search For Witnesses, Video Of Jan. 1 Fire

    Police Search For Witnesses, Video Of Jan. 1 Fire
    Delta Police Department has now taken conduct of the investigation into the commercial building fire located at 5405 12th Avenue, in Tsawwassen. The building caught fire shortly before 4 am, Jan. 1, 2020.

    Police Search For Witnesses, Video Of Jan. 1 Fire

    Determined Search By Officers In Delta, B.C. Saves Teen Unconscious In Bog

    Determined Search By Officers In Delta, B.C. Saves Teen Unconscious In Bog
    Some high-tech aid, coupled with old-fashioned, dogged determination helped a group of police officers in British Columbia save the life of a missing teenager.

    Determined Search By Officers In Delta, B.C. Saves Teen Unconscious In Bog

    Vancouver Home Sales Up In December And 2019, Prices Down From Year Earlier

    Vancouver Home Sales Up In December And 2019, Prices Down From Year Earlier
    The Vancouver area's real estate board says the number of home sales last year was up from 2018, but remained below the region's 10-year average, despite a moderation in prices.

    Vancouver Home Sales Up In December And 2019, Prices Down From Year Earlier