Posts Tagged ‘Gynecare vaginal mesh lawyer’

Vaginal Mesh Lawsuits Updates, New News From Vaginal Mesh Lawyers

Written by Vaginal Mesh Helpline on . Posted in Medical News and Your Vaginal Mesh, Vaginal Mesh News

Vaginal Mesh Helpline is keeping women informed with a mesh update on the all the new  vaginal mesh lawsuits. All vaginal mesh lawyers suggest filing your mesh lawsuit  right away. We do not want any women to be left out.

A 47-year-old former nurse, Gross testified that Ethicon’s Prolift vaginal mesh implant has rendered her unable to work, have sex with her husband, or sit comfortably for more than 20 minutes. (Gross v. Gynecare Inc., Atl-L-6966-10, Superior Court of Atlantic County, New Jersey.) Gross also said that, as a result of the Prolift mesh, she takes up to 20 medications a day and has undergone more than 400 medical encounters, including physical therapy sessions, doctor visits, and many surgeries.

The Charleston woman claims that she suffered serious complications after AMS surgery, when she was implanted with the Elevate transvaginal mesh back in January 2011. The lawsuit alleges that she suffered substantial physical pain and suffering, emotional distress, and economic loss due to medical expenses. These damages, according to the suit, were the direct result of the AMS transvaginal mesh manufacturer’s negligent and wrongful actions. Further, the defendants, AMS, allegedly knew about the risks involved with its transvaginal mesh product but failed to warn the plaintiff.

A Georgia women’s  doctor suggested the mesh when she mentioned that she had bladder leakage when she laughed or coughed. Shortly after the surgery, it felt like razors were slicing her organs and a sharp edge of the mesh cut her boyfriend during sex, she said. Even though she eventually had it removed, the 55-year-old west Georgia woman still has pain she believes is caused by the mesh.

According to court documents, on January 7th, 2013 a Minnesota woman filed a lawsuit in Minnesota District Court (case no. 0:2013cv00060) alleging she suffered serious complications from her Transvaginal Mesh. Transvaginal surgical mesh is used to treat pelvic organ prolapse (POP) and Stress Urinary Incontinence (SUI). Defendant is Boston Scientific and in the lawsuit, plaintiff claims that after surgical implantation with defendant’s Lynx sling she suffered complications.

Vaginal mesh Bell Weather Case Updates

The  first bellwether trials in the Transvaginal Mesh MDLs have been scheduled to start in December 2013. Defendants in the first three bellwether trials are American Medical Systems (AMS), Boston Scientific and Ethicon. (American Medical Systems is referred to as MDL 2325).

 

FDA Adverse Incident Reports On the Vaginal Mesh

The FDA received more than 1,000 complaints associated with trans vaginal mesh between 2005 and 2007. That number almost tripled between 2008 and 2010.

The Vaginal Mesh stories of suffering go on and on with more women filing lawsuits every day. The Vaginal Mesh Helpline has a mission, We must locate all women suffering from these Prolene mesh implants after 2001 and get them to a mesh lawyer to file their transvaginal mesh lawsuit today.

Be aware that all these devices have fancy names but they are all mesh. If you have a Prolene product implanted in you for prolapse or urinary incontinence call the Vaginal Mesh Helpline today. It is most likely one of these mesh devices that women are  filing vaginal mesh lawsuits for nationwide. Be aware you must move quickly. Statute of limitations for states are running close. If you have a current mesh lawyer call today and get and update. Find out who has your vaginal mesh file. Many lawyers may have referred your case out. Find out if your lawsuit was filed. Since the mesh is now a consolidated MDL it is extremely easy for lawyers to file the lawsuits. The Bellwether trials will begin soon…Do not be left out. Stay on top of things. if you need help or have questions call the Vaginal Mesh Helpline today. If you have received a rejection letter from a law firm do not give up hope. call us about your vaginal mesh lawsuit today. We will make every attempt to locate a vaginal mesh lawyer for you to take your case. But, these must be mesh implanted after 2001, closer to 2002.

 

New Vaginal Mesh Lawsuit News, Vaginal Mesh Lawyers

Written by Vaginal Mesh Helpline on . Posted in Vaginal Mesh News

The Vaginal Mesh Helpline is keeping you up to date on all the vaginal mesh lawsuit news. There are new developements in the vaginal mesh trials. Judge Higbee has ordered Ethicon, a subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson, to release post-marketing safety data and FDA correspondence related to its mesh products. The data is likely to include safety information the FDA requested in January 2012 from 30 transvaginal mesh device manufacturers. The FDA asked for 3 years of data on the safety and effectiveness of various mesh products.

New Data of Interest to Vaginal Mesh Victims and Their Vaginal Mesh Lawyers

Vaginal mesh lawyers are expected to review the newly released safety data on Ethicon’s products. The information may reveal key information about how the company brought its products to market, and about how much it knew about serious safety risks and complications.

Vaginal mesh may be used in the treatment of pelvic organ prolapse. This exists when a woman’s pelvic muscles become overly stretched and weakened due to multiple childbirths, surgery, or aging. The muscles may allow the bladder, uterus, or bowel to drop or fall into the vaginal wall because they are not able to adequately support pelvic organs. This may cause symptoms like pressure and urinary incontinence.

Gynecare mesh and similar mesh products were designed to provide support and help pelvic organs back into their original position. This helps to reduce urinary incontinence and other symptoms. Post-marketing reports, however, indicate that women are experiencing more pain and discomfort than prior to the surgery.

On July 13, 2011, the FDA released a safety communication noting that complications from transvaginal mesh repair for pelvic organ prolapse are not rare. The FDA also noted that even multiple corrective surgeries may not fully correct problems like erosion and infection. Other side effects may include organ perforation, bleeding, continued urinary problems, painful sexual intercourse, mesh extrusion, and recurrence of pelvic organ prolapse.

Currently, thousands of women are involved in transvaginal mesh lawsuits around the country. In addition to products made by Ethicon, other manufacturers named as defendants include American Medical Systems, C. R. Bard, Boston Scientific, and Coloplast.

Johnson & Johnson Pulls Four Gynecare Products from Market

With over 600 vaginal mesh lawsuits currently pending in state and federal courts, Johnson & Johnson and Ethicon have stopped selling four vaginal mesh implants. In correspondence filed June 4, 2012, the companies told Judge Joseph R. Goodwin, who is overseeing the current vaginal mesh MDL in the U.S. District Court in West Virginia, that they would cease commercializing the four products and plan to phase them out completely by early 2013.

Products included in the phase-out include:

    Gynecare TVT Secur
    Gynecare Prosima Pelvic Floor Repair System
    Gynecare Prolift Pelvic Floor Repair System
    Gynecare Prolift MTM Pelvic Floor Repair System

Despite this move, the companies will still be expected to release safety data regarding these four products for the New Jersey litigation.

The Gynecare Prolift device was the subject of an earlier controversy, when documents released from a New Jersey lawsuit revealed that Johnson & Johnson continued to sell the mesh even after the FDA directed the company to halt sales because the device lacked the appropriate clearance.

We will continue to keep you updated as new developements occurr.

Vaginal Mesh Helpline Vaginal Mesh News, Mesh Trials To Begin

Written by Vaginal Mesh Helpline on . Posted in Vaginal Mesh News

The dates have been set to begin two manufacturers vaginal mesh trials. Vaginal mesh lawyers will begin the steps to bring justice to 1000's of women whose lives and bodies have turned to turmoil by a Prolene plastic mesh. The mesh was originally tauted as the cure all for urinary  incontinence, bladder, bowel and uterine prolapse. But, there were problems and the adverse incident reports and warnings began to surfice. In 2008 a warning was issued by the FDA.  As these mesh lawsuit trials begin we will hopefully begin to bring justice to the tens of thousands of women injured by the mesh.This is just the beginning and there is still time to file your mesh lawsuit.

Vaginal Mesh Lawsuit Trials Are Ready to Begin

Ethicon Gynecare Trials to Begin Next Year

The first Ethicon Gynecare pelvic mesh lawsuits are scheduled to go before a jury near the end of next year in New Jersey state court. Thes will be presented by lead vaginal mesh lawyers.

Judge Carol E. Higbee, who is overseeing the consolidated Ethicon vaginal mesh lawsuits in New Jersey Superior Court, has scheduled the first Ethicon Gynecare test cases, known as bellwether trials, to begin in November 2012.

Preliminary discovery for cases being prepared for early trial dates is to be completed by March 30, and expert witnesses are to be deposed by October 5, according to a scheduling order Judge Higbee issued on October 28.

More than 350 lawsuits over Ethicon Gynecare transvaginal mesh have been centralized under Higbee for pretrial proceedings.

The cases involves women who received Gynecare Prolift mesh, Gynecare Gynemesh, Gynecare Prolene mesh, Gynecare TVT sling or another pelvic mesh product manufactured by Ethicon.

Bard Trials To Begin Next Year

C.R. Bard Inc. will face its first federal-court trial next year over claims that the company’s vaginal-mesh implants injured women.

U.S. District Judge Joseph R. Goodwin in Charleston, West Virginia, set a Feb. 5 trial date for the first of about 600 federal cases contending that Bard’s Avaulta device caused organ damage. Goodwin is overseeing a consolidation of cases filed in federal courts across the U.S. against Bard, Johnson & Johnson and other makers of vaginal-mesh inserts.

The order of trials for the first federal cases over Avaulta “will be determined after completion” of pretrial information exchanges between Bard and the plaintiffs, Goodwin said in his order yesterday.

We will continue to report as the news comes out.

Vaginal Mesh Updates, New Vaginal Mesh Lawsuits

Written by Vaginal Mesh Helpline on . Posted in Vaginal Mesh News

The Vaginal Mesh Helpline lawsuits lawyers  and the Mesh Helpline are keeping women updated on all new vaginal Mesh lawsuit news. Coloplast has been added to the Multi district mesh lawsuits. Their brands are listed below.

 Coloplast Products Have Been  Named in The Vaginal Mesh Lawsuits
According to their website, Coloplast develops products and services “to make life easier for people with deeply personal and private medical conditions.” The company has a special focus on surgical urology, developing surgical devices for both men and women. For women, Coloplast markets products to treat pelvic organ prolapse and to control urinary incontinence.
The August 6 order by the JPML centralized 13 Coloplast pelvic mesh lawsuits into West Virginia. All plaintiffs allege that the company’s products caused serious injuries. The products at issue in these lawsuits, Novasilk, Exair, Suspend, and Axis, are used to treat pelvic organ prolapse by supporting weakened pelvic muscles.
Consolidation into one court helps conserve resources, increase efficiency, and reduce the risk of duplicative discovery or conflicting rulings from other courts. Each lawsuit retains its individual nature, however, and will be returned to its original court for trial after pre-trial proceedings are complete.

Wome are advised to file litigation immediately to avoid being closed out due to a staute of limitation issue in your state. All the noted mesh ccomplications are being seen in these mesh devices.

Coloplast Lawsuits

  • Novasilk
  • Exair
  • Suspend
  • Axis

Mesh Lawsuits are heating UP as 1000′s Of Mesh Lawsuit Lawyers File New Cases

Written by Vaginal Mesh Helpline on . Posted in Vaginal Mesh News

The vaginal mesh lawsuits are heating up. Thousands of new cases are being filed in a total of 6 MDL's (Multi-District Litigations ).

Wome are being to figure our it is the mesh despite what their doctors are telling them. They are shouting  for justice for a Prolene mesh product that has wrecked havoc on their bodies and marriages. The majority of women implanted with either a vaginal mesh or bladder sling cannot have sexual intercourse.

Women are in pain and the complications and horrific stories of a failed mesh we hear on a  daily  basis are increasing. Women are seeing the vaginal mesh lawyer lawsuit ads on T.V and it is all starting to make sense and come together. They call for help in locating a doctor and lawyer that they can trust.

In response to this the Vaginal Mesh Helpline now has a network of pre-screened lawyers and is working to compile a list of trusted doctors.

Contact us today for a vaginal mesh lawsuit lawyer and doctor.

 

FDA’s Proposed Tracking System Could Reduce Vaginal Mesh Complications

Written by Vaginal Mesh Helpline on . Posted in Vaginal Mesh News

The Vaginal Mesh Helpline continues to report on the news that effects women with vaginal mesh complications. The new FDA tracking system comes a little late for the over 300,000 women implanted with vaginal mesh devices and suffering. However, there is hope. This sends a message that our voices have been heard. By filing vaginal mesh lawsuits and standing up for justice you protect yourself and all women from becoming targets of manufacturers who put profits over people.

FDA’s Propose Tracking System Could Reduce Vaginal Mesh Complications
Tracy Ray

The FDA has proposed a new regulation that would require all new medical devices to carry a unique device identifier (UDI). The UDI would be a code of letters and numbers. Such a code would make it much easier to track devices, which in turn would make it much easier to report complications with a particular model or to find out about such problems.

According to the FDA, “A UDI system has the potential to improve the quality of information in medical device adverse event reports, which will help the FDA identify product problems more quickly, better target recalls and improve patient safety.”

For example, if such a tracking system were in place, a doctor who had a patient with stress urinary incontinence (SUI) or pelvic organ prolapse (POP) and wanted to implant a vaginal mesh device could look up the different models by the UDI and immediately see what transvaginal mesh complications, if any, had been reported with each specific model. Likewise, in the event of a recall, a UDI would make the process much more efficient: the company or the FDA would simply announce that the model carrying a particular UDI number was being recalled.

The FDA’s proposal was a response to legislation passed by Congress in 2007 that directed the FDA to develop regulations establishing a unique device identification system for medical devices.
Many women have suffered transvaginal mesh complications

Such a system might enable future patients to avoid problems resulting from transvaginal mesh. Many women have suffered such complications, including pain, infections, mesh erosion, protrusion, vaginal scarring, dyspareunia, and perforation of the bowels, bladder, or blood vessels. Many of these devices were approved under the FDA’s controversial 510(k) approval process, which allows products to be approved without first undergoing clinical trials to prove they are safe.

If the physicians treating these women had been able to easily look up the type of vaginal mesh device they were considering implanting, and immediately see reports of problems associated with the device, they would have been able to weight the risks and make an informed decision about whether to implant that particular device.
Vaginal mesh MDL consolidated lawsuits

Many women who have suffered complications have filed vaginal mesh lawsuits in order to get compensation for their pain, suffering, and reduced quality of life. Most of these lawsuits charge that the manufacturers of these devices did not test them for safety before putting the on the market and failed to warn the public of the devices’ risks. A number of federal lawsuits have been consolidated in a vaginal mesh MDL in West Virginia.

For help call the Vaginal Mesh Helpline and Vaginal Mesh Support Group today, Let us help you find and vaginal mesh lawyer and doctor.

Vaginal Mesh Overview, Vaginal Mesh Lawyers

Written by Vaginal Mesh Helpline on . Posted in Vaginal Mesh Information

The  Mesh Helpline still hears from women who are having complications and just realized it is from the mesh. Most of these women have seen a lawyer ad on T.V which alerts them to realize they are not alone and that their doctors are giving them the run around. Other women are disenchanted with the T.V ad lawyer they hired or a local lawyer who has sent the case to another lawyer someplace else. There are some basic vaginal mesh guidelines:

Vaginal mesh complications include pain, leakage or incontinence or the bladder or bowel, parch bleeding, infection, pain during sexual intercourse, lower back pain, pain on one side of the body, abdominal pain and difficulty standing for long periods

You are not alone. Close to 400,000 women have vaginal mesh or bladder sling implants

A vaginal mesh comes in many varieties, made by many different manufufacturers. They can be called a sling, a transvaginal mesh, a TVT sling, a bladder sling, a surgical mesh, a vaginal patch and it is still a mesh and part of the Vaginal mesh lawsuts currently underway.

For the men: Sexual intercourse is indeed painful for your wife. She is not lying or making it up. But, with the right doctor there is hope of resuming a normal life. Many men are sueing with their spouse. A California husband just got an award  for $500,000 for loss of intimacy in the relationship.

The mesh can be removed and your body repaired with sutures or another means. A urogynecologist is usually a mesh specialist although a GYN surgeon or urologist can remove the mesh. You must ask the doctors office if the doctor has ever removed a mesh and you must get a straight answer.

Physical therapy will not help the mesh and may be dangerous by pushing it into an organ. This is not a good idea. Estrogen creme will not necessarily help either. You must look into mesh removal.

The vaginal mesh lawsuits are currently underway. It is important to retain a lawyer, and the right lawyer, asap. Statutes of limitations are running out in some states. You will have to go to a doctor to get a statement that you have a mesh problem. If you rely on old medical records it may become harder to prove your case. The best situation is to have a statement in the record that mesh removal or alteration is needed and that you have a mesh issue.

Additional Important Information

Surgical mesh was designed in the 1950s to correct abdominal hernias. The woven material is placed below the skin to patch the abdominal hole and block intestines and other tissues from protruding through the abdominal wall.

Surgical mesh can be made of biological materials or synthetic materials like polypropylene, polytetrafluoroethylene, polyester fibers or stainless steel. The size, shape, thickness and flexibility vary based on the surgeon’s needs. Often, the mesh comes in a prepackaged kit with the necessary tools, to make the procedure easier.

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) reports that hundreds of thousands of hernia repair surgeries are performed each year — with and without surgical mesh — and patients typically recover quickly. However, the FDA has received reports of adverse reactions to the mesh, adhesions (where the loops of the intestines attach to each other or the mesh), and injury to organs, nerves or blood vessels.

Overall, the treatment of hernias with surgical mesh is considered successful, so doctors wanted to use it in other parts of the body that required additional support. In the 1970s, they began inserting surgical mesh abdominally to treat pelvic organ prolapse (POP). In 1996, the FDA approved the first mesh product for treatment of stress urinary incontinence (SUI). The first mesh product for treatment of prolapse was approved in 2002.

Instead of inserting the mesh through abdominal incisions, however, surgeons have recently embraced the idea of implanting the mesh transvaginally (through the vagina). This choice has been disastrous for thousands of women, who have suffered severe complications such as organ perforation and erosion of the mesh. Even revision surgeries cannot always remove the mesh or correct the internal trauma.
Transvaginal Mesh and Pelvic Organ Prolapse

To treat pelvic organ prolapse, surgical mesh can be implanted at the time of a hysterectomy or as a separate surgery. When surgical mesh is inserted through the vagina, it is referred to as transvaginal mesh.

Pelvic organ prolapse is a condition in which the bladder, top of the vagina, uterus, rectum or bowel has descended from its normal position. The condition is thought to be the result of weakened pelvic muscles, usually from pregnancy and childbirth. Of the 300,000 surgical procedures done to correct prolapse in 2010, 100,000 used mesh and 75,000 of those were completed transvaginally.

When transvaginal mesh is used to repair prolapse, the surgeon uses the woven material to create a hammock-like structure under the drooping organ or organs. Once in place, the mesh is anchored to muscles or ligaments by sutures or other devices. Over time, the patient’s tissues grow and fill in the pores of the mesh to keep it stable. The hammock, in turn, maintains the correct position of the affected organ.
To treat prolapse, transvaginal mesh is most commonly placed in these locations:

    The anterior vaginal wall to correct a bladder prolapse.
    The posterior vaginal wall to correct a rectal prolapse.
    The top of the vagina to correct a uterine prolapse.

The most common and serious of the complications for patients is the erosion, or extrusion, of the mesh into nearby organs. This can lead to bleeding, pain during sexual intercourse and urinary problems. Revision surgeries may not fix the problem. And if the patient’s tissues have already grown through the mesh, removal may be impossible.
Transvaginal Mesh and Stress Urinary Incontinence

Surgical mesh can also be used to create a bladder sling that is positioned under the urethra and bladder neck and anchored on the sides. The bladder sling is designed to treat stress urinary incontinence (SUI), which occurs when the bladder is stressed by an everyday activity, such as sneezing or laughing, and subsequently leaks urine. The sling keeps the urethra and bladder neck closed during normal activities, stopping the leakage. In 2010, nearly 260,000 surgeries were performed to correct SUI. Of those, 80 percent were performed using surgical mesh implanted transvaginally.

When a bladder sling is inserted through the vagina, it is known as transvaginal mesh. Typically, small abdominal incisions are also used.
Among the most popular bladder slings:

    Tension-free vaginal tape (TVT): A polypropylene mesh tape is used under the urethra and is held in place by the patient’s body.
    Transobturator tape (TOT): Less invasive than TVT, because there is no need to use a large needle when inserting it.
    Mini-sling: Eliminates the need for abdominal incisions. A metallic inserter and a vaginal incision are used to place the mesh tape.

As with prolapse surgery, there have been widespread reports of serious complications after bladder sling surgery using transvaginal mesh. Many patients have prolonged difficulty urinating or they incur new symptoms of incontinence, specifically urgency. In addition, they run the risk of the slings eroding into nearby structures, organ perforation, infection at the surgery site and internal bleeding.
Transvaginal Mesh and the FDA

Between 2005 and 2007, the FDA received 1,000 reports of complications and injuries related to transvaginal mesh surgeries, including death. The FDA decided to begin studying the medical device in October 2008. The FDA reported that between 2008 and 2010, there were nearly 2,900 reports of injuries caused by transvaginal mesh.

By July 2011, the federal agency concluded in a public safety update that complications with the use of transvaginal mesh for treatment of prolapse are not rare and that mesh repairs are no more effective than non-mesh repairs for treating prolapse.

The FDA took its concern a step further in January 2012, stating that after studying years of scientific data and recommendations from the September 2011 Obstetrics-Gynecology Devices Panel meeting, it was considering reclassifying transvaginal mesh as a high-risk device. If that happens, mesh devices will be subjected to more rigorous testing, including clinical trials with humans.

In that same update, the FDA requested safety data from all surgical mesh manufacturers and ordered post-market studies from seven manufacturers of single-incision mini-slings for SUI and 33 manufacturers of surgical mesh for prolapse.

If you need help with your vaginal mesh call the Vaginal Mesh Helpline today.

 

 

Couple Wins Big on Vaginal Mesh Lawsuit, Millions in Vaginal Mesh Settlement

Written by Vaginal Mesh Helpline on . Posted in Vaginal Mesh News

The Vaginal Mesh Helpline is seeking all women with a vaginal mesh to help you  file your vaginal mesh lawsuit. Ladies, please do not wait. Time is running out. This couple won and won big. Justice spoke and responded to their suffering. Many women we speak to are waiting. Do not wait. Some of the state statutes are running close. See the settlement for this couple below.

Couple wins landmark trial against  Vaginal Mesh medical company. File Your vaginal Mesh lawsuit today. Call the vaginal mesh helpline and get a vaginal mesh lawyer that will work with your best interests at heart. This couple won big and they did not get their case referred around the country from lawyer to lawyer. You must get a vaginal mesh lawyer who is keeping your case or works with a known lead lawyer. KNow where your case is. Get the vaginal mesh settlement you deserve.

Legal and medical professionals from across the country are paying very close attention to a groundbreaking verdict that happened in Bakersfield. For the first time in the nation, a jury has awarded a local couple $5.5 million against the maker of a medical implant, claiming they knew their product was unsafe. Christine Scott got the official news Monday morning at Kern County Superior Courthouse. She had a vaginal mesh surgically implanted and has had complications ever since. She and her husband sued the maker and won, making it the first victory of its kind in the nation. "I was like 'Thank you, God.' We can finally get the word out to women," said Scott after the verdict. After some four years of legal battles and court-ordered silence with the maker of the Avaulta Mesh, C.R. Bard Medical, Scott gets some relief from the victory. An active runner, Scott got the implant to correct a leaky bladder. But, the device began cutting her colon, and tissue continues to grow through the tiny holes in the mesh. She had already had eight surgeries when we first met Scott last month. "I don't know if I'll have ten surgeries now. I don't know if I'll have one. I don't know if I'll have 100. The doctors cannot tell me," Scott said in June. A jury awarded Scott $5 million and her husband $500,000, claiming the mesh has ruined their love life. It's a landmark victory, the first of its kind in the country. The Securities and Exchange Commission indicates 47,000 women have had the mesh implanted, and 650 lawsuits are pending. "In fact, this case, they advertised it as FDA-approved. It's not. It's a crime," said Gene Lorenz, a lawyer representing Scott. The lawyer for C.R. Bard Medical says the company stopped selling the Avaulta Mesh on July 1, 2012 in the United States because the FDA wanted more clinical trials done. But, it's still sold in other countries. "This is a product that has been cleared for use by the FDA and can be safe and effective when used properly and for the right patient," said Michael Brown, attorney for C.R. Bard Medical. "They tested this on 16 rats, 12 rabbits, four sheep and, by their own researcher's admission, the next living being this product went into was women," said Elaine Houghton, Scott's attorney. Scott says she will continue to deal with complications from the mesh, while being a voice for other women. "The hardest part, I will tell you, through this whole thing, is having to keep quiet, watching women still get hurt. But, I was legally not able to get out there and tell and that, I'm sorry," said Scott holding back tears. "And, that every day I was like please be over so I can talk. So, when I got that verdict it was like 'Thank you God.' Now we can do something." There will likely be an appeal in the case, but Scott says she's just happy to no longer have the court-ordered silence, so she can talk about it. She wants to start a support group for women. And, her lawyers are working on a website for people wanting to know more about mesh implants. They hope to have that up and running by Monday.

Call us today and let us help you find a vaginal mesh lawyer and doctor. With so many lawyers advertising and so few doctors willing to help it is very difficult to know what to do. Call and speak to our female medical social worker today.

Vaginal Mesh Manufacturers, Help with All Vaginal Mesh Lawsuits

Written by Vaginal Mesh Helpline on . Posted in Vaginal Mesh Stories, Vaginal Mesh lawyers

If you have a vaginal Mesh and complications from any of the manufacturers listed below we can help: Bard, Gynecare, ( a J & J Ethicon product ), AMS (American Medical Systems) and Boston Scientific  and all vaginal mesh and bladder sling implants. The lawsuts are starting to progess. Do not wait. File you vaginal mesh lawsuit.

C.R. Bard's products include:

        Bard Pelvitex
        Bard Pelvisoft
        Bard Pelvilace or Pelvicol
        Bard Utrtex
        Bard Uretex TO
        Bard Uretex TOO2
        Bard Uretex TOO3

Bard Avaulta Vaginal mesh

Gynecare/Ethicon/Johnson & Johnson products include:

        Gynecare Prosima
        Gynecare TVT Exact
        Gynecare TVT Abbrevo
        Gynecare TVT Retropubic System
        Gynecare TVT
        Gynecare TVT Obturator
        Gynecare TVT Secur
        Gynecare Gynemesh PS
        Gynecare Prolift
        Gynecare Prolift+M

AMS's products include:

        AMS MiniArc Precise Single-Incision Sling
        AMS MiniArc Single Incision Sling
        AMS Monarc Subfascial Hammock
        AMS In-Fast Ultra Transvaginal Sling
        AMS BioArc
        AMS Sparc Self-Fixating Sling System
        AMS Elevate
        AMS Perigree
        AMS Apogee

Boston Scientific products include:

        Boston Scientific Arise
        Boston Scientific Pinnacle
        Boston Scientific Advantage Fit
        Boston Scientific Lynx
        Boston Scientific Obtryx
        Boston Scientific Prefyx PPS
        Boston Scientific Solyx

Tyco Covidian (which manufacturers the Tyco Covidian Duo and Mentor ObTape)

Avaulta Vaginal Mesh Helpline, Bard Avaulta Vaginal Mesh Lawyer

Written by Vaginal Mesh Helpline on . Posted in Vaginal Mesh News

Vaginal Mesh Helpline  is provideng vaginal mesh support and Avaulta mesh lawyers for women with complications from the Bard Avaulta Vaginall Mesh. Like all mesh implants  the Bard Avaulta Vaginal Mesh was used for prolapse or unrinary incontinence and is causing all the classic mesh complications.

C.R. Bard's products include:

        Bard Pelvitex
        Bard Pelvisoft
        Bard Pelvilace or Pelvicol
        Bard Utrtex
        Bard Uretex TO
        Bard Uretex TOO2
        Bard Uretex TOO3
 

Complications with Bard Avaulta Vaginal Mesh Include:

  •     Severe physical pain
  •     erosion of the mesh
  •     pain during sexual intercourse
  •     Difficulty voiding
  •     patch bleeding
  •     lower back pain
  •     Reoccurrence of POP or SUI
  •     Severe infection
  •     Urinary  related problems

Bard Avaulta Mesh Lawyers are filing lawsuits for women with complications from the Bard Avaulta Vaginal mesh.
 
If you have complications from a Bard Avaulta vaginal mesh do not wait because the first Bellwether trial is  scheduled in the Bard Avaulta Mesh Implant MDL

The trial is now set to begin on February 5, 2013 in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of West Virginia.

The purpose of bellwether trials is for both parties to get an idea of how juries will respond to common evidence in representative trials. They can then use this information to negotiate settlements, to plan their strategy for future trials, or to serve as precedents. In January, Judge Goodwin told the attorneys in the Bard MDL to compile a list of possible bellwether cases. Now that a date has been set for the first bellwether trial, a schedule will be established for the discovery process so that the pre-trial proceedings can begin.

You must retain an experienced multi district litigation lawyer immediately. Call the Bard Avaulta vaginal mesh helpline today.