The FDA, Preemption, and Public Safety: Antiregulatory Effects and Maddening Inconsistency

Hastings Center Report, Vol. 41, No. 5, 2011

Georgetown Public Law Research Paper No. 11-129

3 Pages Posted: 20 Oct 2011

See all articles by Lawrence O. Gostin

Lawrence O. Gostin

Georgetown University - Law Center - O'Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law

Date Written: October 18, 2011

Abstract

Most people think of preemption as a technical constitutional doctrine, but it is pivotally important to health and safety, while also opening the door to broad judicial discretion. The Rehnquist and Roberts Courts’ pro-business/pro-preemption jurisprudence is distinctly antiregulatory, invalidating major state public health rules, such as in occupational safety, tobacco control, and motor vehicle safety. Apart from the antiregulatory effects, there is maddening inconsistency. Consider three relatively recent Supreme Court cases. In Riegel v. Medtronic, Inc. (2008), the Court held that federal law bars injured consumers from challenging the safety or effectiveness of FDA-approved medical devices. A year later, in Wyeth v. Levine, the Court came to the opposite conclusion, ruling that injured consumers could sue pharmaceutical companies for failing to warn about the risks of taking brand-name drugs. On June 23, 2011 in PLIVA, Inc v. Mensing, the Court found that injured consumers could not bring failure-to-warn claims for injuries caused by FDA-approved generic pharmaceuticals. Thus, in less than four years, the Court barred state health and safety litigation for FDA-approved medical devices, allowed failure-to-warn claims for branded pharmaceuticals, and then barred those claims for generic pharmaceuticals.

What is the rational basis for treating branded and generic medicines differently even though, by law, the products must be equivalent? Or treating branded drugs and medical devices differently even though they go through similar approval processes? As Justice Sotomayor (dissenting in PLIVA) put it, this “leads to so many absurd consequences that I cannot fathom that Congress would have intended to preempt state law,” while even Justice Thomas writing for the Court admitted this outcome “makes little sense.” This article examines the Supreme Court’s perversion of the preemption doctrine, the newest ruling on generic medicines, and the public health value of litigation.

Keywords: Supreme Court, FDA, jurisprudence, pharmaceuticals, preemption doctrine, litigation

JEL Classification: I18, K20, K13, K32

Suggested Citation

Gostin, Lawrence O., The FDA, Preemption, and Public Safety: Antiregulatory Effects and Maddening Inconsistency (October 18, 2011). Hastings Center Report, Vol. 41, No. 5, 2011, Georgetown Public Law Research Paper No. 11-129, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1945985

Lawrence O. Gostin (Contact Author)

Georgetown University - Law Center - O'Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law ( email )

600 New Jersey Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20001
United States
202-662-9038 (Phone)
202-662-9055 (Fax)

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
123
Abstract Views
2,056
Rank
412,003
PlumX Metrics