JURY ORDERS JOHNSON & JOHNSON TO PAY $417 MILLION OVER CANCER LAWSUIT


Drug maker Johnson & Johnson will have to pay $417 million to a woman who claimed she developed terminal ovarian cancer after using the company's talc-based products, a California jury has ordered.
Eva Echeverria, 63, developed the disease after decades of using Johnson & Johnson talc-based powders for feminine hygiene, according to media accounts.
The case was one of thousands of lawsuits brought nationwide alleging the company failed to warn consumers of the risk of cancer from talc in its products.
The jury made the award, which included $347 million in punitive damages, to Ms. Echeverria after she filed suit in July of last year, a representative of the Los Angeles Superior Court said.
In a statement, Johnson & Johnson said it would lodge an appeal.
"We will appeal today's verdict because we are guided by the science, which supports the safety of Johnson's Baby Powder," company spokesperson Carol Goodrich said in a statement.
She cited the editorial board of the National Cancer Institute's Physician Data Query, which wrote in April that the "weight of evidence does not support" the existence of a link between ovarian cancer and exposure of the genital region to talc.
So far, juries in St. Louis, Missouri have also awarded damages against Johnson & Johnson totaling more than $307 million in similar talc cases.

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