{"title":"Assessing Causation in Breast Implant Litigation: The Role of Science Panels","authors":"Laura Hooper, J. Cecil, Thomas E. Willging","doi":"10.2307/1192294","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"LAURAL L. HOOPER [*] JOE S. CECIL [**] THOMAS E. WILLGING [***] I INTRODUCTION While the idea of court-appointed experts has been supported by individuals concerned with the courts' ability to assess scientific and technical evidence, [1] it has often been resisted by attorneys and judges who confront such evidence. [2] An increasing number of recent cases, however, suggest that court-appointed experts are gaining acceptance, even though appointments remain rare. [3] Such growing acceptance may be due to the increasingly difficult nature of scientific and technical evidence, [4] or to Justice Stephen G. Breyer's recent endorsement of such experts in General Electric Co. v. Joiner. [5] Moreover, recent programs to aid judges in locating qualified experts who are willing to serve will likely encourage further appointments. [6] Nevertheless, the appointment of such experts remains sufficiently rare that problems are difficult to anticipate. In two recent cases--Hall v. Baxter Healthcare Corp. [7] and In re Silicone Gel Breast Implants Products Liability Litigation [8]--federal judges appointed panels of scientific experts to help assess conflicting scientific testimony regarding causation of systemic injuries by silicone gel breast implants. This article will describe the circumstances that gave rise to the appointments, the procedures followed in making the appointments and reporting to the courts, and the reactions of the participants in the proceedings. It will also offer specific suggestions for improving the use of such panels of appointed science experts. Expert panels may be developed and used in a variety of ways; these approaches illustrate only two forms that such panels may take. Part II offers a brief overview of the silicone gel breast implant product liability litigation and the two cases in which science panels were appointed. [9] Subsequent parts compare the procedures used to select the experts, the instruction of the expert panels in their tasks, the preparation of the panels' reports, the depositions and testimony of the panel members, and the costs of the two programs. Part VIII provides a preliminary assessment of the effect of each program based on the participants' impressions and citations to the reports in related litigation. Finally, Part IX summarizes participants' overall reactions to the two procedures and suggests issues for judges to consider when appointing future panels. II OVERVIEW OF SILCONE GEL BREAST IMPLANT LITIGATION Claims of systemic injuries arising from silicone gel breast implants have presented some of the most complex scientific evidence issues in the federal courts. [10] Following the removal of silicone gel breast implants from the market in 1992 by the Food and Drug Administration, more than 400,000 cases were filed in federal and state courts alleging injuries arising from leakage or rupture of the shell that encased the silicone gel. The most troublesome allegation concerned the extent to which the silicone gel caused or exacerbated connective tissue diseases or immune system dysfunction. [11] Research on these issues was being reported even as the cases were being litigated. [12] Moreover, an assessment of this research required an understanding of several areas of science, including epidemiology, toxicology, immunology, rheumatology, chemistry, and statistics. The emerging nature of this research and differing research methodologies have made such cases among the most difficult ever presented in federal c ourts. [13] The federal courts have responded to this wave of difficult cases by consolidating the cases for pretrial proceedings. In 1992; the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation transferred all silicone gel breast implant product liability cases filed in federal courts to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama before Chief Judge Sam C. …","PeriodicalId":39484,"journal":{"name":"Law and Contemporary Problems","volume":"17 2 1","pages":"139-190"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2001-09-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"12","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Law and Contemporary Problems","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2307/1192294","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Social Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 12
Abstract
LAURAL L. HOOPER [*] JOE S. CECIL [**] THOMAS E. WILLGING [***] I INTRODUCTION While the idea of court-appointed experts has been supported by individuals concerned with the courts' ability to assess scientific and technical evidence, [1] it has often been resisted by attorneys and judges who confront such evidence. [2] An increasing number of recent cases, however, suggest that court-appointed experts are gaining acceptance, even though appointments remain rare. [3] Such growing acceptance may be due to the increasingly difficult nature of scientific and technical evidence, [4] or to Justice Stephen G. Breyer's recent endorsement of such experts in General Electric Co. v. Joiner. [5] Moreover, recent programs to aid judges in locating qualified experts who are willing to serve will likely encourage further appointments. [6] Nevertheless, the appointment of such experts remains sufficiently rare that problems are difficult to anticipate. In two recent cases--Hall v. Baxter Healthcare Corp. [7] and In re Silicone Gel Breast Implants Products Liability Litigation [8]--federal judges appointed panels of scientific experts to help assess conflicting scientific testimony regarding causation of systemic injuries by silicone gel breast implants. This article will describe the circumstances that gave rise to the appointments, the procedures followed in making the appointments and reporting to the courts, and the reactions of the participants in the proceedings. It will also offer specific suggestions for improving the use of such panels of appointed science experts. Expert panels may be developed and used in a variety of ways; these approaches illustrate only two forms that such panels may take. Part II offers a brief overview of the silicone gel breast implant product liability litigation and the two cases in which science panels were appointed. [9] Subsequent parts compare the procedures used to select the experts, the instruction of the expert panels in their tasks, the preparation of the panels' reports, the depositions and testimony of the panel members, and the costs of the two programs. Part VIII provides a preliminary assessment of the effect of each program based on the participants' impressions and citations to the reports in related litigation. Finally, Part IX summarizes participants' overall reactions to the two procedures and suggests issues for judges to consider when appointing future panels. II OVERVIEW OF SILCONE GEL BREAST IMPLANT LITIGATION Claims of systemic injuries arising from silicone gel breast implants have presented some of the most complex scientific evidence issues in the federal courts. [10] Following the removal of silicone gel breast implants from the market in 1992 by the Food and Drug Administration, more than 400,000 cases were filed in federal and state courts alleging injuries arising from leakage or rupture of the shell that encased the silicone gel. The most troublesome allegation concerned the extent to which the silicone gel caused or exacerbated connective tissue diseases or immune system dysfunction. [11] Research on these issues was being reported even as the cases were being litigated. [12] Moreover, an assessment of this research required an understanding of several areas of science, including epidemiology, toxicology, immunology, rheumatology, chemistry, and statistics. The emerging nature of this research and differing research methodologies have made such cases among the most difficult ever presented in federal c ourts. [13] The federal courts have responded to this wave of difficult cases by consolidating the cases for pretrial proceedings. In 1992; the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation transferred all silicone gel breast implant product liability cases filed in federal courts to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama before Chief Judge Sam C. …
虽然法院指定专家的想法得到了关注法院评估科学和技术证据能力的个人的支持,[1]但它经常受到面对这些证据的律师和法官的抵制。[2]然而,最近越来越多的案件表明,法院指定的专家正在得到人们的接受,尽管任命仍然很少。[3]这种日益增长的接受可能是由于科学和技术证据日益困难的性质,[4]或者是由于斯蒂芬·g·布雷耶法官最近在通用电气公司诉乔伊纳案中对这类专家的支持。[5]此外,最近帮助法官寻找愿意服务的合格专家的项目可能会鼓励进一步的任命。[6]然而,任命这样的专家仍然非常罕见,问题很难预料。在最近的两个案例中——Hall诉Baxter Healthcare Corp.[7]和In re硅胶乳房植入物产品责任诉讼[8]——联邦法官任命了科学专家小组来帮助评估关于硅胶乳房植入物造成全身损伤的因果关系的相互矛盾的科学证据。本文将叙述产生这些任命的情况、作出任命和向法院报告所遵循的程序以及诉讼参与人的反应。它还将提供具体的建议,以改进这种由指定的科学专家组成的小组的使用。专家小组可以以各种方式建立和使用;这些方法只说明了这种小组可能采取的两种形式。第二部分简要概述了硅胶乳房植入产品责任诉讼和科学小组被任命的两个案例。[9]接下来的部分比较了选择专家的程序、专家小组在任务中的指导、专家小组报告的准备、专家小组成员的证词和证词,以及这两个项目的成本。第八部分根据参与者对相关诉讼报告的印象和引用,对每个方案的效果进行初步评估。最后,第九部分总结了与会者对两种程序的总体反应,并提出了法官在任命未来专家组时应考虑的问题。硅酮凝胶乳房植入物引起的全身损伤索赔在联邦法院提出了一些最复杂的科学证据问题。[10] 1992年,食品和药物管理局(Food and Drug Administration)将硅胶隆胸植入物从市场上撤下后,联邦和州法院受理了40多万起案件,指控硅胶外壳泄漏或破裂造成的伤害。最棘手的指控涉及硅凝胶引起或加剧结缔组织疾病或免疫系统功能障碍的程度。[11]就在这些案件被提起诉讼的时候,对这些问题的研究也被报道出来了。[12]此外,对这项研究进行评估需要了解几个科学领域,包括流行病学、毒理学、免疫学、风湿病学、化学和统计学。这项研究的新兴性质和不同的研究方法使这类案件成为联邦法院有史以来最难审理的案件之一。[13]联邦法院对这一波疑难案件的反应是将案件合并到审前程序中。1992年;多地区诉讼司法小组将所有在联邦法院提起的硅胶乳房植入产品责任案件移交给阿拉巴马州北部地区的美国地方法院,由首席法官Sam C. ...审理
期刊介绍:
Law and Contemporary Problems was founded in 1933 and is the oldest journal published at Duke Law School. It is a quarterly, interdisciplinary, faculty-edited publication of Duke Law School. L&CP recognizes that many fields in the sciences, social sciences, and humanities can enhance the development and understanding of law. It is our purpose to seek out these areas of overlap and to publish balanced symposia that enlighten not just legal readers, but readers from these other disciplines as well. L&CP uses a symposium format, generally publishing one symposium per issue on a topic of contemporary concern. Authors and articles are selected to ensure that each issue collectively creates a unified presentation of the contemporary problem under consideration. L&CP hosts an annual conference at Duke Law School featuring the authors of one of the year’s four symposia.