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Bellwether Cases Chosen in Bair Hugger MDL

Posted On May 12th, 2017 By CSSFIRM.COM

The parties in the Bair Hugger lawsuits have each identified 16 bellwether cases from the 150 randomly selected by the U.S. District Court for the District of Minnesota court in January.

The lawsuits, consolidated in multidistrict litigation (MDL) in 2015, are related to 3M Company’s Bair Hugger Forced-Air Warming system and plaintiffs’ allegations that it caused severe infections after orthopedic surgical by spreading bacteria from the hospital floor or the inside of the device and contaminated the surgical site, causing them to develop severe and sometimes drug-resistant infections in certain circumstances. Some of these infections have been life threatening and have necessitated amputation in certain circumstances.

What are Bellwether Cases?

Bellwether cases are typically chosen based their ability to represent, at trial, the issues that will likely arise in all the cases centralized in the litigation. The intent of the bellwether process is to avoid duplicative discovery, give the parties a good indication of what might happen in future trials, and help advance the litigation in a timely manner.

The Pros and Cons of Forced-Air Warming Blankets

The 3M Bair Hugger warming blanket was intended to prevent and treat unintended hypothermia in patients by blowing hot hair into a specially designed blanket covering the patient to help maintain normal body temperature, reduce bleeding, and decrease recovery time.

However, patients who underwent hip or knee replacement surgery and were left with serious deep joint infections have brought lawsuits against 3M. According to court documents, these infections have at times necessitated:

  • Repeated hospitalizations
  • Additional surgeries
  • Insertion of antibiotic spacers in the affected joint
  • IV antibiotic therapy
  • Physical therapy
  • Removal or revision of the implant device
  • Lengthy and painful recoveries
  • Amputation of the affected limb, in some circumstances

The lawsuits also claim that 3M has known about the risk of surgical site infection for several years, but has not issued warnings or taken any other steps to redesign the device; instead, plaintiffs say, the company has taken steps to conceal and discredit scientific studies which threatened to undermine sales of the Bair Hugger system.

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