RSSMicro.com Search - RSS Feed Search Engine - RSS Feed Directory
Dedicated RSS Feed Search Engine
 Search 3.2 million RSS feeds
The most comprehensive RSS feed search on the web
Top Stories  |  FeedRank Checker

Published

   Last Hour

   Last Day

   Past Week

   Past Month

 Anytime







Featured
RSS Feeds


CNN RSS Feeds

Reuters RSS Feeds

MSNBC RSS Feeds

New York Times RSS Feeds

Washington Post RSS Feeds

CNBC RSS Feeds

ABC News RSS Feeds

Fox News RSS Feeds

Sky News RSS Feeds

Forbes RSS Feeds

CNET RSS Feeds

Unicef RSS Feeds

PBS RSS Feeds

Wall Street Journal RSS Feeds

Financial Times RSS Feeds

Business Week RSS Feeds

Bloomberg RSS Feeds

TheStreet RSS Feeds

ESPN RSS Feeds

   


»Click here to calculate your site FeedRank Today«

FeedRank - RSSMicro Search

FeedRank, a newly developed algorithm for ranking RSS feeds only on RSSMicro
Click here to learn more




FeedRank: 4/10  4/10  Good  ---  www.setexasrecord.com
Southeast Texas Record - ...

 

 
Thursday, May 15, 2008 --- 84 days ago
A Texas appeals court overturned a multimillion-dollar verdict against the drug maker Merck & Company in a case involving its withdrawn painkiller Vioxx. In April 2006, a jury in Rio Grande City awarded $32 million to the widow of 71-year-old Leonel Garza, who died after taking the painkiller Vioxx for less than one month. The award included $7 million for compensatory damages and $25 million for punitive damages, but under a Texas law that limits damages it was later cut to about $7.75 million. The Garza trial was one of the few trials Merck lost over Vioxx claims. On Wednesday, May 14, the Fourth Court of Appeals in Texas overturned the verdict, ruling that Mr. Garza's family had not proved that his use of Vioxx caused blood clots that led to his heart attack. The opinion was signed by Justice Sandee Bryan Marion. During the trial, Merck lawyers argued that Mr. Garza's heart attack was a result of his 23 years of heart disease. Garza had a prior heart attack and heart bypass surgery, smoked for nearly 30 years and died of the second heart attack after taking Vioxx in 2001. The three-judge panel agreed, concluding that the family did not provide sufficient evidence to rule out his long-standing heart disease as the cause of his fatal heart attack. "Today's decision reaffirms that there is simply no reliable scientific evidence that Vioxx caused Mr. Garza's heart attack," Theodore V. H. Mayer, a lawyer ...




Recent Posts





 Facebook     Del.icio.us     Digg     StumbleUpon     Reddit     Google
Copyright © 2008 RSSMicro.com