That's what happened to Brianna Maya. Now 13, she was little more than three-and-a-half years old when she was given Motrin to ease the suffering caused by a fever and persistent cough.
The resulting Stevens Johnson Syndrome rash quickly escalated to a much more serious situation, eventually leaving the child with severe burns to 84 percent of her body. Brianna Maya was also left blind in one eye.
According to a Bloomberg News report published May 20, jurors in a Philadelphia state court earlier that day ruled that Motrin manufacturer McNeil Consumer Healthcare, a subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson (J&J), must pay the Maya family $10 million dollars in damages for the harm caused to their little girl.
Previously, Stevens Johnson Syndrome lawyers have seen the pendulum of justice swing wildly in the SJS portfolio. Last year, a federal jury in Illinois awarded $3.5 million in damages to a woman from Illinois who developed SJS after taking Children's Motrin—although a judge dismissed the award based on procedural grounds.
And in 2008, a jury in California cleared J&J as well as McNeil Healthcare from liability after an 11-year-old girl had ingested pain relief medication, only to develop Stevens Johnson Syndrome.
For the Maya family, the outcome was more successful—although it is unknown if the verdict would be appealed by the defendant.
READ MORE STEVENS JOHNSON SYNDROME (SJS) LEGAL NEWS
The jury in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas agreed with the plaintiff's stance, noting the failure to warn was "a factual cause" of the injuries sustained by the little girl.
While the jury did not agree that the pain medication was defective, or that punitive damages were in order, the jury did extend a damages award about twice what the plaintiffs had been seeking.
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Judge's need to be more educated in different areas and/or request someone of greater knowledge on certain matters regarding cases to help them make a just and fair decision with all the knowledge available to him. All of this at the county's or state's expense, for the judge will benefit many times over from is increase in knowledge to help him judge wiser and more speedily therefore decreasing court time and saving everyone money and time.