Health Status

Johnson & Johnson ordered to pay US$72 million in suit linking talcum powder to ovarian cancer

Jacqueline Fox used Johnson & Johnson products containing talcum powder, from the pharmaceutical giant's trademark baby powder to its shower-to-shower body powder, for 35 years. She died of ovarian cancer last fall.

Jacqueline Fox passed away last fall, but her voice recently came alive inside a St. Louis courtroom.

In an audio deposition, the Birmingham, Ala., native who died at 62 recounted 35 years of using Johnson & Johnson products containing talcum powder, from the pharmaceutical giant’s trademark baby powder to its shower-to-shower body powder. Fox had applied them toward feminine hygiene, but she believed they were what ultimately killed her.

More than three years ago, she was identified as having an ovarian cancer that proved fatal. Fox then joined a lot more than 1,200 women from across the nation suing Johnson & Johnson for neglecting to warn consumers from the dangers related to talc, the mineral utilized in baby powder.

Monday, her case had become the first by which monetary compensation was awarded.

A Missouri jury has ordered Johnson & Johnson to pay for Fox’s family US$72 million in actual and punitive damages. Certainly one of Fox’s lead attorneys, Jim Onder, told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch that US$31 million will go towards the Missouri Crime Victim Compensation Fund.

The suit’s other defendant, talc producer Imerys Talc America, is not faulted.

“We’ve no higher responsibility than the health and safety of consumers and we’re disappointed using the outcome of the trial,” Johnson & Johnson said in a statement Tuesday. “We sympathize with the plaintiff’s family but firmly believe the security of cosmetic talc is supported by decades of scientific evidence.”

Related

To Top