Foley & Small has handled a variety of defective medical implant claims. We have helped those injured by such defective implants and their families during a difficult period of medical treatment and recovery, coordinating insurance and other coverage benefits, dealing with loss of pay claims, issues a permanent impairment and overall recovery.
Click on the buttons below for specific information on the implant listed. Each type of implant is the subject of claims by patient/clients who have suffered injury due to defects with the implant. Foley & Small is handling claims for clients who have received these implants.
Before a medical implant, such as an artificial hip or knee or cardiac pacemaker, can be sold in the United States, the manufacturer must put the device through testing and trials. The manufacturer then must submit the implant to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for approval before the device can be distributed in the United States. At times, implant manufacturers push the FDA to approve a medical implant before of the safety and efficacy of the implant has been adequately and fully tested. They do this for a variety of reasons, some good – to make the device available to patients who need it, and some bad – to get the device to market as soon as possible to start making a profit on its sale. Due to its limited resources, the FDA is unable to carefully test and screen all such devices or surgical tools. Sometimes, the FDA approves a new device or implant on the basis of its "substantial similarity" to an already existing device. Unfortunately, this can and has led to instances where a device has been approved and it is later discovered that the device is defective as failures occur after the device or implant has been placed in patients.
Once the device has been placed on the market, the FDA continues to monitor it through post-marketing reports sent in by the manufacturer and through the MedWatch program, an FDA program that allows consumers and health care professionals to report serious side effects or defects, quality control issues and medical errors associated with the device.
Each year medical device makers offer for sale and use hundreds of medical devices, including joint replacement implants, such as knees, hips and other joints; cosmetic implants, such as breast implants; and offer surgical instruments. Sometimes, unanticipated side effects or defects are discovered after the implant or device is approved for use. If the problem is serious enough, the FDA may issue a warning to the public. If the problem or defect is sufficiently dangerous, the FDA may decide that the risks of the device outweigh its benefits and issue a recall. When this occurs the patient should receive written notification of the recall and information on what to do in response to the defective product.
The FDA is supposed to be responsible for testing and approving each and every medical device for safety and efficacy. However, the truth is that the FDA is unable to carefully test and screen all such devices or surgical tools. In recent years, the approval process for medical devices has been accelerated as multi-national manufacturers motivated by the desire for profit have pushed harder and harder for fast device approval and less rigorous testing. Oftentimes, the FDA simply approves a new device, prosthesis, or implant on the basis of its "substantial similarity" to an already existing device.
A wide variety of medical implants have either been recalled or challenged in litigation as being defective.
Click on the buttons above for specific information on the implant listed. Each type of implant is the subject of claims by patient/clients who have suffered injury due to defects with the implant. Foley & Small is handling claims for clients who have received these implants. Foley & Small has handled claims for other defective implants as well.
If you, a friend or family member has suffered injury due to a defective medical implant, contact Foley & Small by clicking on the link at the top right of this page for a live chat with a member of our staff or email us from our Contact page. You can also call us at 800-276-2525.
Foley & Small has handled numerous defective medical implant cases helping our clients and their families deal with the effects of such defective products.