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The Learned Intermediary Doctrine

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Title: The Learned Intermediary Doctrine


1
The Learned Intermediary Doctrine
  • Janet Gilligan Abaray
  • Burg Simpson Eldredge Hersh Jardine
  • Cincinnati, Ohio

2
The Learned Intermediary Doctrine
  • The learned intermediary doctrine is itself an
    exception to the manufacturers traditional duty
    to warn consumers directly of the risks
    associated with a product. And now courts have
    developed multiple exceptions to the exception.

3
Origins of the Learned Intermediary Doctrine
  • 1925The Eighth Circuit first suggested that a
    manufacturers duty to the ultimate consumer
    would be limited in the case of prescription
    drugs.
  • 1948The first court concluded that a
    manufacturers duty to warn was satisfied by
    providing warnings to a prescribing physician.
  • 1967Eighth Circuit was the first court to coin
    the term learned intermediary.

4
From Patients to Consumers
  • Direct-to-consumer advertisements have turned
    patients into consumers.
  • 1990sFDA issued guidelines to remove some
    restrictions on direct-to-consumer
    advertisements.
  • 198912 million a year spent on
    direct-to-consumer advertising. Currently that
    figure has risen to over 4 billion a year.
  • In recent years, only four additional state high
    courts have adopted the learned intermediary
    doctrine, and none of them considered the effect
    of direct-to-consumer advertising.

5
The Learned Intermediary Doctrine
JustificationsOutdated Unpersuasive
  • Manufacturer difficulty in providing warnings to
    the ultimate user
  • Patients reliance on treating physicians
    judgment in selecting appropriate drugs
  • It is the physicians who exercise their
    professional judgment in selecting appropriate
    drugs
  • Physicians are in the best position to provide
    appropriate warnings to their patients and
  • Direct warnings to ultimate users would interfere
    with the doctor/patient relationship.

6
Premise One Manufacturer difficulty in providing
warnings to the ultimate user
  • 4 billion a year spent on direct-to-consumer
    advertisingmanufacturers can hardly say that
    they lack effective means to provide warnings.
  • Drug manufacturers can provide warnings and
    instructions on
  • Labels, pamphlets in the box, or brochures sent
    to hospitals, doctors offices, and pharmacies.
  • Also, pharmacists can and already do tape
    warnings on pill bottles, include printed
    instructions and warnings with dispensed
    medications.

7
Premise Two Patients reliance on treating
physicians judgment in selecting appropriate
drugs
  • With the advent of direct-to-consumer advertising
    and websites like WebMD, patients come to the
    doctor already well informed, and often
    self-diagnosed with a prescription in mind.
  • Selection of drugs are often dictated by price
    and insurance coverage.

8
Premise Three It is the physicians who exercise
their professional judgment in selecting
appropriate drugs
  • Yet drug manufacturers spend over 4 billion
    advertising to consumers, clearly with the intent
    of influencing prescriptions.
  • Direct-to-consumer advertising suggests that
    consumers are active participants in their health
    care decisions. And often go to the doctor
    knowing which prescription they are going to ask
    for.

9
Premise Four Physicians are in the best position
to provide appropriate warnings to their patients
  • In a study conducted by the FDA in 1997, only
    one-third of 1,000 patients had received
    information from their doctors about the
    dangerous side effects of drugs they were taking.
  • Managed care has reduced the time allotted per
    patient, and physicians have considerably less
    time to inform patients of the risks and benefits
    of a drug.

10
Premise Five Direct warnings to ultimate users
would interfere with the doctor/patient
relationship.
  • Creating an informed consumer does not harm the
    doctor/patient relationship.
  • Informing patients promotes discussion and
    understanding.
  • Patients still must see a doctor to obtain
    prescriptions, making the doctor the ultimate
    control for prescription medications.

11
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12
Learned Intermediary DoctrineExceptions to the
Exception
  • Courts have recognized the following exceptions
  • Vaccines
  • Oral Contraceptives
  • Contraceptive Devices
  • Drugs Advertised Directly To Consumers
  • Overpromoted Drugs
  • Drugs Withdrawn From the Market

13
Learned Intermediary DoctrineExceptions to the
Exception
  • Given the plethora of exceptions to the learned
    intermediary doctrine we ascertain no benefit in
    adopting a doctrine that would require the
    simultaneous adoption of numerous exceptions in
    order to be justly utilized.
  • State Ex Rel. Johnson Johnson Corp. v. Karl
    (2007), 220 W. Va. 463, 477, 647 S.E.2d 899, 913.

14
Proximate Cause
  • PhysiciansEven if I had the adequate warning I
    would still have prescribed the drug.
  • Direct-to-Consumer Advertisingit is the patient
    as well as the physician who decides whether to
    take a certain drug.
  • Duty to WarnA patients decision must be as
    equally informed as a physicians decision.
  • CausationWe must ask whether the patient would
    have still taken the drug had she known of the
    undisclosed risk.

15
The Learned Intermediary Doctrine
  • Outdated Unpersuasive
  • The U.S. medical-legal jurisprudence is based on
    images of health care that no longer exist.
  • With the advent of direct-to consumer advertising
    and websites like WebMD the justifications other
    courts have used for the learned-intermediary
    doctrine are outdated and unpersuasive.
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