While
many other firms have seen a drop in the number of metal hip implant clients,
Sullo and Sullo attorneys have actually seen those numbers climb. Andrew Sullo,
Class Action Lead Counsel & Managing Partner notes that “Although many firms have noticed a slowdown
in the number of clients hiring them for DePuy ASR and Pinnacle lawsuits, our
firm has not. I believe that is because we are constantly offering our clients
new and updated information. Our job is to inform all metal-on-metal hip
recipients that even though their hip may not have failed yet, it could and
after August 26th they may lose rights to recover compensation from
Johnson and Johnson.”
With
the statute of limitations coming up soon on the ASR metal-on-metal hip implant
lawsuits, Sullo & Sullo is experiencing an increase in the ASR recipients
who are coming forward and asking to be a part of the lawsuit. Many clients in
the lawsuit have experienced adverse health effects as a direct result of
having an ASR all metal hip implant put into their body. On the other hand, many have experienced
little or no pain with their ASR hip implant but have elected to join the
lawsuit that they can be financial protected at a point in the future should
their ASR device fail. Through no fault of their own, these people have become
victims of a heavily flawed system which allows harmful medical devices to be
sold to the public. The ASR was approved in 2005 by the FDA under the
controversial 510(k) process which allows medical devices to essentially ride
in on the coattails of other medical devices which have come before them. In
some cases approval is granted based on a device which has actually been
discontinued because of the number of problems associated with it.
There
are many probable reasons this number is relatively low, one being there may be
a large number of the ASR recipients who are not aware of the recall or who
don’t know what type of implant their surgeon used. Other ASR recipients may be
elderly and although they are having adverse symptoms may simply believe it is
due to the natural aging process. Another group of ASR recipients have likely
not come forward because they are not yet having trouble with their implant. While
it’s good that some ASR hip implant patients are not having trouble, if you
consider a failure rate of at least fifty percent, it stands to reason that a
large number of these implant recipients will have trouble in the future.
Whether that happens in a month, six months or five years, there is a good
statistical likelihood that it will, in fact, happen.
Andrew
Sullo considers this group of clients “question-mark clients.” This means that
while they have not yet experienced problems with the ASR hip implant there is
a high probability that they will in the future. Unfortunately, once the
statute runs, the time for pursuing a lawsuit against DePuy is gone forever
leaving potentially thousands of victims with absolutely no legal recourse as
well as the need for expensive revision surgery and deteriorating health. A
revision surgery can costs over $100,000. For those who don’t have health
insurance this is catastrophic. For those who do have health insurance they may
still end up with huge out-of-pocket expenses. The average recovery time for
revision surgery is anywhere from six weeks to six months, depending on the
deterioration level of the hip, the relative health of the patient and whether
there is metal poisoning involved. This means time away from work, or the
potential to lose employment all together. Many patients end up with a
significant limp, the inability to participate in activities they once enjoyed,
or at the far end of the spectrum, permanent disability. The patient who feels
just fine right now could end up financially and medically devastated down the
road should he or she neglect to join in the DePuy ASR lawsuits.
In
short, a lawsuit against DePuy is the clear and logical choice and those who
have not yet made the decision to file should come into the Sullo & Sullo
offices and sit down with a highly experienced legal professional who can offer
the necessary information and assistance while preserving that person’s future
rights.