Television advertisements soliciting claims from people who say they got cancer from talc powder products dramatically increased in September, the same month that Johnson & Johnson said it would ...
With Johnson & Johnson sweetening the pot and mustering up the support of 83% of those who claim that the company’s talc products caused their cancer, it had appeared that the sides were ...
J&J Must Pay $15 Million to Man Who Says Its Talc Caused His Cancer, Jury Finds By Brendan Pierson (Reuters) -Johnson & Johnson must pay $15 million to a Connecticut man who alleges that he ...
Johnson & Johnson was ordered to pay $15 million to a Connecticut man who claims he developed mesothelioma from its talc powder. Johnson & Johnson must pay $15 million to a Connecticut man who ...
"Those facts show that the verdict is irreconcilable with the decades of independent scientific evaluations confirming talc is safe, does not contain asbestos and does not cause cancer," Haas said.
SINGAPORE – Have you ever sprinkled talcum powder on your child during nappy change? I know I have and, in all likelihood, so have many of you. We may have unwittingly sprinkled a probable ...
People who voted to settle their baby power-related health claims against Johnson & Johnson should have their ballots thrown out because the consumer products giant rigged the tally, according to ...
The fate of Johnson & Johnson’s latest push to use bankruptcy courts to end thousands of cancer lawsuits tied to its iconic baby powder now hinges on a high-stakes trial in January. After months ...
The mesothelioma trials are not part of J&J's proposed $9 billion talc bankruptcy, filed last month in Texas. A jury hit Johnson & Johnson on Tuesday with a $15 million verdict in a Connecticut ...
“Those facts show that the verdict is irreconcilable with the decades of independent scientific evaluations confirming talc is safe, does not contain asbestos and does not cause cancer,” Mr ...
comes as JJ seeks to resolve claims by more than 62,000 people who say that they got ovarian and other gynecological cancers from talc through a nearly $9 billion settlement in bankruptcy.
The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) has published a new assessment of talc’s potential to cause cancer, concluding that is it ‘probably carcinogenic’ to humans.