Guest guest Posted November 16, 2004 Report Share Posted November 16, 2004 http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1100136998966 Pa. Judge: Testimony by Expert Doesn't Measure Up to 'Frye' Nann Burke The Legal Intelligencer 11-12-2004 A Philadelphia judge found an expert's testimony inadmissible in a medical malpractice case because the methodologies he used " appear to be nothing more than a few anecdotal references and a cursory review of several studies tangentially related to " the alleged medical basis of the lawsuit. After a Frye evidentiary hearing, Common Pleas Judge F. threw out the report of R. Breggin, a renowned psychiatrist who extrapolated about possible permanent effects of taking benzodiazepines, a class of drugs including Valium, Xanax and Ativan that are used as antianxiety agents, muscle relaxants, sedatives and hypnotics. " Under Frye [v. United States], novel scientific evidence is admissible only upon a showing that the methodology has gained general acceptance in the relevant medical community, " wrote in Vinitski v. Adler. " Breggin's testimony fell well short of the mark. " The judge also found Breggin's expert report to be " legally insufficient, " focusing on the treatment provided by the defendant doctors " not because it ran counter to the acceptable standards of care but because it ran counter to Breggin's personal ideas and ideologies of what the standards should be. " Breggin, from Ithaca, N.Y., is the author of such books as, " Your Drug May Be Your Problem: How and Why to Stop Taking Psychiatric Medications " . He's also written " Toxic Psychiatry: Why Therapy, Empathy and Love Must Replace the Drug " ; " Electroshock and Biochemical Theories of the 'New Psychiatry;' " and " Talking Back to Prozac: What Doctors Won't Tell You About Today's Most Controversial Drug. " Breggin's report " draws legal conclusions rather than providing facts which would allow a fact-finder to come to his own conclusion, " wrote. " A review of the Breggin report does not indicate where and how the doctors deviated from the standard of care or how harm was created as a result of the care received. " granted the defendants' motion for summary judgment, dismissing the case. The plaintiff has appealed the ruling to the Superior Court. H. , a defense counsel, said, " This is the type of case that the Frye and Daubert standards were created to prevent. " Gerald B. Baldino Jr., one of the plaintiff's attorneys, disagreed. Simon Vinitski had sued the doctors in 2001, alleging that the combination of medication -- Xanax, Prozac, Valium, Tofranil and Depakote -- they prescribed and he used intermittently over 10 years to treat anxiety and depression had caused brain atrophy and other injuries, according to court documents. Baldino said his client, a former medical physicist at the Jefferson Medical College, began to exhibit symptoms like those associated with Alzheimer's disease, but doctors ruled out that illness and others. In court, the defendants challenged Breggin's expert opinion. According to one defendant's motion: " Not only are Dr. Breggin's assertions condemned by the absence of literature, but also his arguments are belied by the opinions of other experts in the field of psychiatric medicine. " held a Frye hearing June 4 to determine whether the report, examining " whether prolonged exposure to high doses of benzodiazepines caused permanent brain injury, " was inadmissible. noted that the articles Breggin relied on didn't include relevant clinical or controlled studies, but instead analyzed other studies that didn't examine permanent brain damage caused by the drugs. Breggin admitted his methodologies didn't include treating patients with brain damage caused by benzodiazepine use or conducting a clinical study of such patients, according to . Baldino, who represents Vinitski with attorney Francis J. Curran Jr. of Curran & Rassias, said this is because testing the combination of drugs his client used would have required human testing. No clinical studies of the effects of long-term benzodiazepine use had been conducted, he said. " But you can look at the effects of short-term use, " said Baldino, of Sacchetta & Baldino. Considering those short-term studies, " Dr. Breggin extrapolated that the combining of the medications increases the toxic effect of the drug, and that the result was that Mr. Vinitski suffered brain damage. He called it a 'toxic cocktail.' " found that Breggin's opinions were extrapolations. Under the Frye standard, experts may only extrapolate when the medical inquiry is " new or the opportunities to examine a specific cause-and-effect relationship are limited. " That was not the case here, said. Studying the effects of benzodiazepines isn't new, and there are plenty of people who have been treated with the drugs to participate in studies about the effects of its long-term use, she concluded. " Breggin failed to establish that his variation of an accepted methodology is generally accepted by scientists in the relevant field as a method for arriving at his conclusion, " she wrote in her opinion published Sept. 17. R. Galli, of Goldfein & ph, also served as defense counsel. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 16, 2004 Report Share Posted November 16, 2004 http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1100136998966 Pa. Judge: Testimony by Expert Doesn't Measure Up to 'Frye' Nann Burke The Legal Intelligencer 11-12-2004 A Philadelphia judge found an expert's testimony inadmissible in a medical malpractice case because the methodologies he used " appear to be nothing more than a few anecdotal references and a cursory review of several studies tangentially related to " the alleged medical basis of the lawsuit. After a Frye evidentiary hearing, Common Pleas Judge F. threw out the report of R. Breggin, a renowned psychiatrist who extrapolated about possible permanent effects of taking benzodiazepines, a class of drugs including Valium, Xanax and Ativan that are used as antianxiety agents, muscle relaxants, sedatives and hypnotics. " Under Frye [v. United States], novel scientific evidence is admissible only upon a showing that the methodology has gained general acceptance in the relevant medical community, " wrote in Vinitski v. Adler. " Breggin's testimony fell well short of the mark. " The judge also found Breggin's expert report to be " legally insufficient, " focusing on the treatment provided by the defendant doctors " not because it ran counter to the acceptable standards of care but because it ran counter to Breggin's personal ideas and ideologies of what the standards should be. " Breggin, from Ithaca, N.Y., is the author of such books as, " Your Drug May Be Your Problem: How and Why to Stop Taking Psychiatric Medications " . He's also written " Toxic Psychiatry: Why Therapy, Empathy and Love Must Replace the Drug " ; " Electroshock and Biochemical Theories of the 'New Psychiatry;' " and " Talking Back to Prozac: What Doctors Won't Tell You About Today's Most Controversial Drug. " Breggin's report " draws legal conclusions rather than providing facts which would allow a fact-finder to come to his own conclusion, " wrote. " A review of the Breggin report does not indicate where and how the doctors deviated from the standard of care or how harm was created as a result of the care received. " granted the defendants' motion for summary judgment, dismissing the case. The plaintiff has appealed the ruling to the Superior Court. H. , a defense counsel, said, " This is the type of case that the Frye and Daubert standards were created to prevent. " Gerald B. Baldino Jr., one of the plaintiff's attorneys, disagreed. Simon Vinitski had sued the doctors in 2001, alleging that the combination of medication -- Xanax, Prozac, Valium, Tofranil and Depakote -- they prescribed and he used intermittently over 10 years to treat anxiety and depression had caused brain atrophy and other injuries, according to court documents. Baldino said his client, a former medical physicist at the Jefferson Medical College, began to exhibit symptoms like those associated with Alzheimer's disease, but doctors ruled out that illness and others. In court, the defendants challenged Breggin's expert opinion. According to one defendant's motion: " Not only are Dr. Breggin's assertions condemned by the absence of literature, but also his arguments are belied by the opinions of other experts in the field of psychiatric medicine. " held a Frye hearing June 4 to determine whether the report, examining " whether prolonged exposure to high doses of benzodiazepines caused permanent brain injury, " was inadmissible. noted that the articles Breggin relied on didn't include relevant clinical or controlled studies, but instead analyzed other studies that didn't examine permanent brain damage caused by the drugs. Breggin admitted his methodologies didn't include treating patients with brain damage caused by benzodiazepine use or conducting a clinical study of such patients, according to . Baldino, who represents Vinitski with attorney Francis J. Curran Jr. of Curran & Rassias, said this is because testing the combination of drugs his client used would have required human testing. No clinical studies of the effects of long-term benzodiazepine use had been conducted, he said. " But you can look at the effects of short-term use, " said Baldino, of Sacchetta & Baldino. Considering those short-term studies, " Dr. Breggin extrapolated that the combining of the medications increases the toxic effect of the drug, and that the result was that Mr. Vinitski suffered brain damage. He called it a 'toxic cocktail.' " found that Breggin's opinions were extrapolations. Under the Frye standard, experts may only extrapolate when the medical inquiry is " new or the opportunities to examine a specific cause-and-effect relationship are limited. " That was not the case here, said. Studying the effects of benzodiazepines isn't new, and there are plenty of people who have been treated with the drugs to participate in studies about the effects of its long-term use, she concluded. " Breggin failed to establish that his variation of an accepted methodology is generally accepted by scientists in the relevant field as a method for arriving at his conclusion, " she wrote in her opinion published Sept. 17. R. Galli, of Goldfein & ph, also served as defense counsel. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2004 Report Share Posted November 17, 2004 What's very scary with this development is that it's setting the precedent that only findings in a scientific study have validity. As we well know, clinical trials are conducted by Big Pharma and they decide what they're going to study. So if a side effect isn't part of a clinical study it doesn't exist???? THIS IS VERY SCARY!!!Violent behavior is anecdotally a BIG problem, but we're not naive enough to think that GSK will do a study to prove it!! > > http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1100136998966 > > Pa. Judge: Testimony by Expert Doesn't Measure Up to 'Frye' > Nann Burke > The Legal Intelligencer > 11-12-2004 > > > A Philadelphia judge found an expert's testimony inadmissible in a medical malpractice case because the methodologies he used " appear to be nothing more than a few anecdotal references and a cursory review of several studies tangentially related to " the alleged medical basis of the lawsuit. > > After a Frye evidentiary hearing, Common Pleas Judge F. threw out the report of R. Breggin, a renowned psychiatrist who extrapolated about possible permanent effects of taking benzodiazepines, a class of drugs including Valium, Xanax and Ativan that are used as antianxiety agents, muscle relaxants, sedatives and hypnotics. > > " Under Frye [v. United States], novel scientific evidence is admissible only upon a showing that the methodology has gained general acceptance in the relevant medical community, " wrote in Vinitski v. Adler. " Breggin's testimony fell well short of the mark. " > > The judge also found Breggin's expert report to be " legally insufficient, " focusing on the treatment provided by the defendant doctors " not because it ran counter to the acceptable standards of care but because it ran counter to Breggin's personal ideas and ideologies of what the standards should be. " > > Breggin, from Ithaca, N.Y., is the author of such books as, " Your Drug May Be Your Problem: How and Why to Stop Taking Psychiatric Medications " . He's also written " Toxic Psychiatry: Why Therapy, Empathy and Love Must Replace the Drug " ; " Electroshock and Biochemical Theories of the 'New Psychiatry;' " and " Talking Back to Prozac: What Doctors Won't Tell You About Today's Most Controversial Drug. " > > Breggin's report " draws legal conclusions rather than providing facts which would allow a fact-finder to come to his own conclusion, " wrote. " A review of the Breggin report does not indicate where and how the doctors deviated from the standard of care or how harm was created as a result of the care received. " > > granted the defendants' motion for summary judgment, dismissing the case. The plaintiff has appealed the ruling to the Superior Court. > > H. , a defense counsel, said, " This is the type of case that the Frye and Daubert standards were created to prevent. " > > Gerald B. Baldino Jr., one of the plaintiff's attorneys, disagreed. > > Simon Vinitski had sued the doctors in 2001, alleging that the combination of medication -- Xanax, Prozac, Valium, Tofranil and Depakote -- they prescribed and he used intermittently over 10 years to treat anxiety and depression had caused brain atrophy and other injuries, according to court documents. > > Baldino said his client, a former medical physicist at the Jefferson Medical College, began to exhibit symptoms like those associated with Alzheimer's disease, but doctors ruled out that illness and others. > > In court, the defendants challenged Breggin's expert opinion. According to one defendant's motion: " Not only are Dr. Breggin's assertions condemned by the absence of literature, but also his arguments are belied by the opinions of other experts in the field of psychiatric medicine. " > > held a Frye hearing June 4 to determine whether the report, examining " whether prolonged exposure to high doses of benzodiazepines caused permanent brain injury, " was inadmissible. > > noted that the articles Breggin relied on didn't include relevant clinical or controlled studies, but instead analyzed other studies that didn't examine permanent brain damage caused by the drugs. Breggin admitted his methodologies didn't include treating patients with brain damage caused by benzodiazepine use or conducting a clinical study of such patients, according to . > > Baldino, who represents Vinitski with attorney Francis J. Curran Jr. of Curran & Rassias, said this is because testing the combination of drugs his client used would have required human testing. No clinical studies of the effects of long-term benzodiazepine use had been conducted, he said. > > " But you can look at the effects of short-term use, " said Baldino, of Sacchetta & Baldino. Considering those short-term studies, " Dr. Breggin extrapolated that the combining of the medications increases the toxic effect of the drug, and that the result was that Mr. Vinitski suffered brain damage. He called it a 'toxic cocktail.' " > > found that Breggin's opinions were extrapolations. Under the Frye standard, experts may only extrapolate when the medical inquiry is " new or the opportunities to examine a specific cause-and-effect relationship are limited. " > > That was not the case here, said. Studying the effects of benzodiazepines isn't new, and there are plenty of people who have been treated with the drugs to participate in studies about the effects of its long-term use, she concluded. > > " Breggin failed to establish that his variation of an accepted methodology is generally accepted by scientists in the relevant field as a method for arriving at his conclusion, " she wrote in her opinion published Sept. 17. > > R. Galli, of Goldfein & ph, also served as defense counsel. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2004 Report Share Posted November 17, 2004 What's very scary with this development is that it's setting the precedent that only findings in a scientific study have validity. As we well know, clinical trials are conducted by Big Pharma and they decide what they're going to study. So if a side effect isn't part of a clinical study it doesn't exist???? THIS IS VERY SCARY!!!Violent behavior is anecdotally a BIG problem, but we're not naive enough to think that GSK will do a study to prove it!! > > http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1100136998966 > > Pa. Judge: Testimony by Expert Doesn't Measure Up to 'Frye' > Nann Burke > The Legal Intelligencer > 11-12-2004 > > > A Philadelphia judge found an expert's testimony inadmissible in a medical malpractice case because the methodologies he used " appear to be nothing more than a few anecdotal references and a cursory review of several studies tangentially related to " the alleged medical basis of the lawsuit. > > After a Frye evidentiary hearing, Common Pleas Judge F. threw out the report of R. Breggin, a renowned psychiatrist who extrapolated about possible permanent effects of taking benzodiazepines, a class of drugs including Valium, Xanax and Ativan that are used as antianxiety agents, muscle relaxants, sedatives and hypnotics. > > " Under Frye [v. United States], novel scientific evidence is admissible only upon a showing that the methodology has gained general acceptance in the relevant medical community, " wrote in Vinitski v. Adler. " Breggin's testimony fell well short of the mark. " > > The judge also found Breggin's expert report to be " legally insufficient, " focusing on the treatment provided by the defendant doctors " not because it ran counter to the acceptable standards of care but because it ran counter to Breggin's personal ideas and ideologies of what the standards should be. " > > Breggin, from Ithaca, N.Y., is the author of such books as, " Your Drug May Be Your Problem: How and Why to Stop Taking Psychiatric Medications " . He's also written " Toxic Psychiatry: Why Therapy, Empathy and Love Must Replace the Drug " ; " Electroshock and Biochemical Theories of the 'New Psychiatry;' " and " Talking Back to Prozac: What Doctors Won't Tell You About Today's Most Controversial Drug. " > > Breggin's report " draws legal conclusions rather than providing facts which would allow a fact-finder to come to his own conclusion, " wrote. " A review of the Breggin report does not indicate where and how the doctors deviated from the standard of care or how harm was created as a result of the care received. " > > granted the defendants' motion for summary judgment, dismissing the case. The plaintiff has appealed the ruling to the Superior Court. > > H. , a defense counsel, said, " This is the type of case that the Frye and Daubert standards were created to prevent. " > > Gerald B. Baldino Jr., one of the plaintiff's attorneys, disagreed. > > Simon Vinitski had sued the doctors in 2001, alleging that the combination of medication -- Xanax, Prozac, Valium, Tofranil and Depakote -- they prescribed and he used intermittently over 10 years to treat anxiety and depression had caused brain atrophy and other injuries, according to court documents. > > Baldino said his client, a former medical physicist at the Jefferson Medical College, began to exhibit symptoms like those associated with Alzheimer's disease, but doctors ruled out that illness and others. > > In court, the defendants challenged Breggin's expert opinion. According to one defendant's motion: " Not only are Dr. Breggin's assertions condemned by the absence of literature, but also his arguments are belied by the opinions of other experts in the field of psychiatric medicine. " > > held a Frye hearing June 4 to determine whether the report, examining " whether prolonged exposure to high doses of benzodiazepines caused permanent brain injury, " was inadmissible. > > noted that the articles Breggin relied on didn't include relevant clinical or controlled studies, but instead analyzed other studies that didn't examine permanent brain damage caused by the drugs. Breggin admitted his methodologies didn't include treating patients with brain damage caused by benzodiazepine use or conducting a clinical study of such patients, according to . > > Baldino, who represents Vinitski with attorney Francis J. Curran Jr. of Curran & Rassias, said this is because testing the combination of drugs his client used would have required human testing. No clinical studies of the effects of long-term benzodiazepine use had been conducted, he said. > > " But you can look at the effects of short-term use, " said Baldino, of Sacchetta & Baldino. Considering those short-term studies, " Dr. Breggin extrapolated that the combining of the medications increases the toxic effect of the drug, and that the result was that Mr. Vinitski suffered brain damage. He called it a 'toxic cocktail.' " > > found that Breggin's opinions were extrapolations. Under the Frye standard, experts may only extrapolate when the medical inquiry is " new or the opportunities to examine a specific cause-and-effect relationship are limited. " > > That was not the case here, said. Studying the effects of benzodiazepines isn't new, and there are plenty of people who have been treated with the drugs to participate in studies about the effects of its long-term use, she concluded. > > " Breggin failed to establish that his variation of an accepted methodology is generally accepted by scientists in the relevant field as a method for arriving at his conclusion, " she wrote in her opinion published Sept. 17. > > R. Galli, of Goldfein & ph, also served as defense counsel. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2004 Report Share Posted November 17, 2004 What's very scary with this development is that it's setting the precedent that only findings in a scientific study have validity. As we well know, clinical trials are conducted by Big Pharma and they decide what they're going to study. So if a side effect isn't part of a clinical study it doesn't exist???? THIS IS VERY SCARY!!!Violent behavior is anecdotally a BIG problem, but we're not naive enough to think that GSK will do a study to prove it!! > > http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1100136998966 > > Pa. Judge: Testimony by Expert Doesn't Measure Up to 'Frye' > Nann Burke > The Legal Intelligencer > 11-12-2004 > > > A Philadelphia judge found an expert's testimony inadmissible in a medical malpractice case because the methodologies he used " appear to be nothing more than a few anecdotal references and a cursory review of several studies tangentially related to " the alleged medical basis of the lawsuit. > > After a Frye evidentiary hearing, Common Pleas Judge F. threw out the report of R. Breggin, a renowned psychiatrist who extrapolated about possible permanent effects of taking benzodiazepines, a class of drugs including Valium, Xanax and Ativan that are used as antianxiety agents, muscle relaxants, sedatives and hypnotics. > > " Under Frye [v. United States], novel scientific evidence is admissible only upon a showing that the methodology has gained general acceptance in the relevant medical community, " wrote in Vinitski v. Adler. " Breggin's testimony fell well short of the mark. " > > The judge also found Breggin's expert report to be " legally insufficient, " focusing on the treatment provided by the defendant doctors " not because it ran counter to the acceptable standards of care but because it ran counter to Breggin's personal ideas and ideologies of what the standards should be. " > > Breggin, from Ithaca, N.Y., is the author of such books as, " Your Drug May Be Your Problem: How and Why to Stop Taking Psychiatric Medications " . He's also written " Toxic Psychiatry: Why Therapy, Empathy and Love Must Replace the Drug " ; " Electroshock and Biochemical Theories of the 'New Psychiatry;' " and " Talking Back to Prozac: What Doctors Won't Tell You About Today's Most Controversial Drug. " > > Breggin's report " draws legal conclusions rather than providing facts which would allow a fact-finder to come to his own conclusion, " wrote. " A review of the Breggin report does not indicate where and how the doctors deviated from the standard of care or how harm was created as a result of the care received. " > > granted the defendants' motion for summary judgment, dismissing the case. The plaintiff has appealed the ruling to the Superior Court. > > H. , a defense counsel, said, " This is the type of case that the Frye and Daubert standards were created to prevent. " > > Gerald B. Baldino Jr., one of the plaintiff's attorneys, disagreed. > > Simon Vinitski had sued the doctors in 2001, alleging that the combination of medication -- Xanax, Prozac, Valium, Tofranil and Depakote -- they prescribed and he used intermittently over 10 years to treat anxiety and depression had caused brain atrophy and other injuries, according to court documents. > > Baldino said his client, a former medical physicist at the Jefferson Medical College, began to exhibit symptoms like those associated with Alzheimer's disease, but doctors ruled out that illness and others. > > In court, the defendants challenged Breggin's expert opinion. According to one defendant's motion: " Not only are Dr. Breggin's assertions condemned by the absence of literature, but also his arguments are belied by the opinions of other experts in the field of psychiatric medicine. " > > held a Frye hearing June 4 to determine whether the report, examining " whether prolonged exposure to high doses of benzodiazepines caused permanent brain injury, " was inadmissible. > > noted that the articles Breggin relied on didn't include relevant clinical or controlled studies, but instead analyzed other studies that didn't examine permanent brain damage caused by the drugs. Breggin admitted his methodologies didn't include treating patients with brain damage caused by benzodiazepine use or conducting a clinical study of such patients, according to . > > Baldino, who represents Vinitski with attorney Francis J. Curran Jr. of Curran & Rassias, said this is because testing the combination of drugs his client used would have required human testing. No clinical studies of the effects of long-term benzodiazepine use had been conducted, he said. > > " But you can look at the effects of short-term use, " said Baldino, of Sacchetta & Baldino. Considering those short-term studies, " Dr. Breggin extrapolated that the combining of the medications increases the toxic effect of the drug, and that the result was that Mr. Vinitski suffered brain damage. He called it a 'toxic cocktail.' " > > found that Breggin's opinions were extrapolations. Under the Frye standard, experts may only extrapolate when the medical inquiry is " new or the opportunities to examine a specific cause-and-effect relationship are limited. " > > That was not the case here, said. Studying the effects of benzodiazepines isn't new, and there are plenty of people who have been treated with the drugs to participate in studies about the effects of its long-term use, she concluded. > > " Breggin failed to establish that his variation of an accepted methodology is generally accepted by scientists in the relevant field as a method for arriving at his conclusion, " she wrote in her opinion published Sept. 17. > > R. Galli, of Goldfein & ph, also served as defense counsel. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2004 Report Share Posted November 17, 2004 What's very scary with this development is that it's setting the precedent that only findings in a scientific study have validity. As we well know, clinical trials are conducted by Big Pharma and they decide what they're going to study. So if a side effect isn't part of a clinical study it doesn't exist???? THIS IS VERY SCARY!!!Violent behavior is anecdotally a BIG problem, but we're not naive enough to think that GSK will do a study to prove it!! > > http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1100136998966 > > Pa. Judge: Testimony by Expert Doesn't Measure Up to 'Frye' > Nann Burke > The Legal Intelligencer > 11-12-2004 > > > A Philadelphia judge found an expert's testimony inadmissible in a medical malpractice case because the methodologies he used " appear to be nothing more than a few anecdotal references and a cursory review of several studies tangentially related to " the alleged medical basis of the lawsuit. > > After a Frye evidentiary hearing, Common Pleas Judge F. threw out the report of R. Breggin, a renowned psychiatrist who extrapolated about possible permanent effects of taking benzodiazepines, a class of drugs including Valium, Xanax and Ativan that are used as antianxiety agents, muscle relaxants, sedatives and hypnotics. > > " Under Frye [v. United States], novel scientific evidence is admissible only upon a showing that the methodology has gained general acceptance in the relevant medical community, " wrote in Vinitski v. Adler. " Breggin's testimony fell well short of the mark. " > > The judge also found Breggin's expert report to be " legally insufficient, " focusing on the treatment provided by the defendant doctors " not because it ran counter to the acceptable standards of care but because it ran counter to Breggin's personal ideas and ideologies of what the standards should be. " > > Breggin, from Ithaca, N.Y., is the author of such books as, " Your Drug May Be Your Problem: How and Why to Stop Taking Psychiatric Medications " . He's also written " Toxic Psychiatry: Why Therapy, Empathy and Love Must Replace the Drug " ; " Electroshock and Biochemical Theories of the 'New Psychiatry;' " and " Talking Back to Prozac: What Doctors Won't Tell You About Today's Most Controversial Drug. " > > Breggin's report " draws legal conclusions rather than providing facts which would allow a fact-finder to come to his own conclusion, " wrote. " A review of the Breggin report does not indicate where and how the doctors deviated from the standard of care or how harm was created as a result of the care received. " > > granted the defendants' motion for summary judgment, dismissing the case. The plaintiff has appealed the ruling to the Superior Court. > > H. , a defense counsel, said, " This is the type of case that the Frye and Daubert standards were created to prevent. " > > Gerald B. Baldino Jr., one of the plaintiff's attorneys, disagreed. > > Simon Vinitski had sued the doctors in 2001, alleging that the combination of medication -- Xanax, Prozac, Valium, Tofranil and Depakote -- they prescribed and he used intermittently over 10 years to treat anxiety and depression had caused brain atrophy and other injuries, according to court documents. > > Baldino said his client, a former medical physicist at the Jefferson Medical College, began to exhibit symptoms like those associated with Alzheimer's disease, but doctors ruled out that illness and others. > > In court, the defendants challenged Breggin's expert opinion. According to one defendant's motion: " Not only are Dr. Breggin's assertions condemned by the absence of literature, but also his arguments are belied by the opinions of other experts in the field of psychiatric medicine. " > > held a Frye hearing June 4 to determine whether the report, examining " whether prolonged exposure to high doses of benzodiazepines caused permanent brain injury, " was inadmissible. > > noted that the articles Breggin relied on didn't include relevant clinical or controlled studies, but instead analyzed other studies that didn't examine permanent brain damage caused by the drugs. Breggin admitted his methodologies didn't include treating patients with brain damage caused by benzodiazepine use or conducting a clinical study of such patients, according to . > > Baldino, who represents Vinitski with attorney Francis J. Curran Jr. of Curran & Rassias, said this is because testing the combination of drugs his client used would have required human testing. No clinical studies of the effects of long-term benzodiazepine use had been conducted, he said. > > " But you can look at the effects of short-term use, " said Baldino, of Sacchetta & Baldino. Considering those short-term studies, " Dr. Breggin extrapolated that the combining of the medications increases the toxic effect of the drug, and that the result was that Mr. Vinitski suffered brain damage. He called it a 'toxic cocktail.' " > > found that Breggin's opinions were extrapolations. Under the Frye standard, experts may only extrapolate when the medical inquiry is " new or the opportunities to examine a specific cause-and-effect relationship are limited. " > > That was not the case here, said. Studying the effects of benzodiazepines isn't new, and there are plenty of people who have been treated with the drugs to participate in studies about the effects of its long-term use, she concluded. > > " Breggin failed to establish that his variation of an accepted methodology is generally accepted by scientists in the relevant field as a method for arriving at his conclusion, " she wrote in her opinion published Sept. 17. > > R. Galli, of Goldfein & ph, also served as defense counsel. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2004 Report Share Posted November 17, 2004 I agree, when I read the Judges decision discounting all of Breggin's work I immediately thought " but all of psychiatry is based on beliefs not scientific fact " Every freaking medical article I read that is used to justify the drug treatments has glaring disclaimers all through them. Basically they don't know why or how but they can tell you that the drugs " appear " to work for this " disorder " that they cannot call a disease because they cannot do a physical test to determine whether it's really there or not. How can one set of conjecture be more valid than Breggin's work is beyond me. Jim > > > What's very scary with this development is that it's setting the > precedent that only findings in a scientific study have validity. As > we well know, clinical trials are conducted by Big Pharma and they > decide what they're going to study. So if a side effect isn't part of > a clinical study it doesn't exist???? THIS IS VERY SCARY!!!Violent > behavior is anecdotally a BIG problem, but we're not naive enough to > think that GSK will do a study to prove it!! > > > > > > > > > > > http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1100136998966 > > > > Pa. Judge: Testimony by Expert Doesn't Measure Up to 'Frye' > > Nann Burke > > The Legal Intelligencer > > 11-12-2004 > > > > > > A Philadelphia judge found an expert's testimony inadmissible in a > medical malpractice case because the methodologies he used " appear to > be nothing more than a few anecdotal references and a cursory review > of several studies tangentially related to " the alleged medical basis > of the lawsuit. > > > > After a Frye evidentiary hearing, Common Pleas Judge F. > threw out the report of R. Breggin, a renowned > psychiatrist who extrapolated about possible permanent effects of > taking benzodiazepines, a class of drugs including Valium, Xanax and > Ativan that are used as antianxiety agents, muscle relaxants, > sedatives and hypnotics. > > > > " Under Frye [v. United States], novel scientific evidence is > admissible only upon a showing that the methodology has gained > general acceptance in the relevant medical community, " wrote in > Vinitski v. Adler. " Breggin's testimony fell well short of the mark. " > > > > The judge also found Breggin's expert report to be " legally > insufficient, " focusing on the treatment provided by the defendant > doctors " not because it ran counter to the acceptable standards of > care but because it ran counter to Breggin's personal ideas and > ideologies of what the standards should be. " > > > > Breggin, from Ithaca, N.Y., is the author of such books as, " Your > Drug May Be Your Problem: How and Why to Stop Taking Psychiatric > Medications " . He's also written " Toxic Psychiatry: Why Therapy, > Empathy and Love Must Replace the Drug " ; " Electroshock and > Biochemical Theories of the 'New Psychiatry;' " and " Talking Back to > Prozac: What Doctors Won't Tell You About Today's Most Controversial > Drug. " > > > > Breggin's report " draws legal conclusions rather than providing > facts which would allow a fact-finder to come to his own conclusion, " > wrote. " A review of the Breggin report does not indicate where > and how the doctors deviated from the standard of care or how harm > was created as a result of the care received. " > > > > granted the defendants' motion for summary judgment, > dismissing the case. The plaintiff has appealed the ruling to the > Superior Court. > > > > H. , a defense counsel, said, " This is the type of case > that the Frye and Daubert standards were created to prevent. " > > > > Gerald B. Baldino Jr., one of the plaintiff's attorneys, disagreed. > > > > Simon Vinitski had sued the doctors in 2001, alleging that the > combination of medication -- Xanax, Prozac, Valium, Tofranil and > Depakote -- they prescribed and he used intermittently over 10 years > to treat anxiety and depression had caused brain atrophy and other > injuries, according to court documents. > > > > Baldino said his client, a former medical physicist at the > Jefferson Medical College, began to exhibit symptoms like those > associated with Alzheimer's disease, but doctors ruled out that > illness and others. > > > > In court, the defendants challenged Breggin's expert opinion. > According to one defendant's motion: " Not only are Dr. Breggin's > assertions condemned by the absence of literature, but also his > arguments are belied by the opinions of other experts in the field of > psychiatric medicine. " > > > > held a Frye hearing June 4 to determine whether the report, > examining " whether prolonged exposure to high doses of > benzodiazepines caused permanent brain injury, " was inadmissible. > > > > noted that the articles Breggin relied on didn't include > relevant clinical or controlled studies, but instead analyzed other > studies that didn't examine permanent brain damage caused by the > drugs. Breggin admitted his methodologies didn't include treating > patients with brain damage caused by benzodiazepine use or conducting > a clinical study of such patients, according to . > > > > Baldino, who represents Vinitski with attorney Francis J. Curran > Jr. of Curran & Rassias, said this is because testing the combination > of drugs his client used would have required human testing. No > clinical studies of the effects of long-term benzodiazepine use had > been conducted, he said. > > > > " But you can look at the effects of short-term use, " said Baldino, > of Sacchetta & Baldino. Considering those short-term studies, " Dr. > Breggin extrapolated that the combining of the medications increases > the toxic effect of the drug, and that the result was that Mr. > Vinitski suffered brain damage. He called it a 'toxic cocktail.' " > > > > found that Breggin's opinions were extrapolations. Under the > Frye standard, experts may only extrapolate when the medical inquiry > is " new or the opportunities to examine a specific cause-and-effect > relationship are limited. " > > > > That was not the case here, said. Studying the effects of > benzodiazepines isn't new, and there are plenty of people who have > been treated with the drugs to participate in studies about the > effects of its long-term use, she concluded. > > > > " Breggin failed to establish that his variation of an accepted > methodology is generally accepted by scientists in the relevant field > as a method for arriving at his conclusion, " she wrote in her opinion > published Sept. 17. > > > > R. Galli, of Goldfein & ph, also served as defense > counsel. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2004 Report Share Posted November 17, 2004 I agree, when I read the Judges decision discounting all of Breggin's work I immediately thought " but all of psychiatry is based on beliefs not scientific fact " Every freaking medical article I read that is used to justify the drug treatments has glaring disclaimers all through them. Basically they don't know why or how but they can tell you that the drugs " appear " to work for this " disorder " that they cannot call a disease because they cannot do a physical test to determine whether it's really there or not. How can one set of conjecture be more valid than Breggin's work is beyond me. Jim > > > What's very scary with this development is that it's setting the > precedent that only findings in a scientific study have validity. As > we well know, clinical trials are conducted by Big Pharma and they > decide what they're going to study. So if a side effect isn't part of > a clinical study it doesn't exist???? THIS IS VERY SCARY!!!Violent > behavior is anecdotally a BIG problem, but we're not naive enough to > think that GSK will do a study to prove it!! > > > > > > > > > > > http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1100136998966 > > > > Pa. Judge: Testimony by Expert Doesn't Measure Up to 'Frye' > > Nann Burke > > The Legal Intelligencer > > 11-12-2004 > > > > > > A Philadelphia judge found an expert's testimony inadmissible in a > medical malpractice case because the methodologies he used " appear to > be nothing more than a few anecdotal references and a cursory review > of several studies tangentially related to " the alleged medical basis > of the lawsuit. > > > > After a Frye evidentiary hearing, Common Pleas Judge F. > threw out the report of R. Breggin, a renowned > psychiatrist who extrapolated about possible permanent effects of > taking benzodiazepines, a class of drugs including Valium, Xanax and > Ativan that are used as antianxiety agents, muscle relaxants, > sedatives and hypnotics. > > > > " Under Frye [v. United States], novel scientific evidence is > admissible only upon a showing that the methodology has gained > general acceptance in the relevant medical community, " wrote in > Vinitski v. Adler. " Breggin's testimony fell well short of the mark. " > > > > The judge also found Breggin's expert report to be " legally > insufficient, " focusing on the treatment provided by the defendant > doctors " not because it ran counter to the acceptable standards of > care but because it ran counter to Breggin's personal ideas and > ideologies of what the standards should be. " > > > > Breggin, from Ithaca, N.Y., is the author of such books as, " Your > Drug May Be Your Problem: How and Why to Stop Taking Psychiatric > Medications " . He's also written " Toxic Psychiatry: Why Therapy, > Empathy and Love Must Replace the Drug " ; " Electroshock and > Biochemical Theories of the 'New Psychiatry;' " and " Talking Back to > Prozac: What Doctors Won't Tell You About Today's Most Controversial > Drug. " > > > > Breggin's report " draws legal conclusions rather than providing > facts which would allow a fact-finder to come to his own conclusion, " > wrote. " A review of the Breggin report does not indicate where > and how the doctors deviated from the standard of care or how harm > was created as a result of the care received. " > > > > granted the defendants' motion for summary judgment, > dismissing the case. The plaintiff has appealed the ruling to the > Superior Court. > > > > H. , a defense counsel, said, " This is the type of case > that the Frye and Daubert standards were created to prevent. " > > > > Gerald B. Baldino Jr., one of the plaintiff's attorneys, disagreed. > > > > Simon Vinitski had sued the doctors in 2001, alleging that the > combination of medication -- Xanax, Prozac, Valium, Tofranil and > Depakote -- they prescribed and he used intermittently over 10 years > to treat anxiety and depression had caused brain atrophy and other > injuries, according to court documents. > > > > Baldino said his client, a former medical physicist at the > Jefferson Medical College, began to exhibit symptoms like those > associated with Alzheimer's disease, but doctors ruled out that > illness and others. > > > > In court, the defendants challenged Breggin's expert opinion. > According to one defendant's motion: " Not only are Dr. Breggin's > assertions condemned by the absence of literature, but also his > arguments are belied by the opinions of other experts in the field of > psychiatric medicine. " > > > > held a Frye hearing June 4 to determine whether the report, > examining " whether prolonged exposure to high doses of > benzodiazepines caused permanent brain injury, " was inadmissible. > > > > noted that the articles Breggin relied on didn't include > relevant clinical or controlled studies, but instead analyzed other > studies that didn't examine permanent brain damage caused by the > drugs. Breggin admitted his methodologies didn't include treating > patients with brain damage caused by benzodiazepine use or conducting > a clinical study of such patients, according to . > > > > Baldino, who represents Vinitski with attorney Francis J. Curran > Jr. of Curran & Rassias, said this is because testing the combination > of drugs his client used would have required human testing. No > clinical studies of the effects of long-term benzodiazepine use had > been conducted, he said. > > > > " But you can look at the effects of short-term use, " said Baldino, > of Sacchetta & Baldino. Considering those short-term studies, " Dr. > Breggin extrapolated that the combining of the medications increases > the toxic effect of the drug, and that the result was that Mr. > Vinitski suffered brain damage. He called it a 'toxic cocktail.' " > > > > found that Breggin's opinions were extrapolations. Under the > Frye standard, experts may only extrapolate when the medical inquiry > is " new or the opportunities to examine a specific cause-and-effect > relationship are limited. " > > > > That was not the case here, said. Studying the effects of > benzodiazepines isn't new, and there are plenty of people who have > been treated with the drugs to participate in studies about the > effects of its long-term use, she concluded. > > > > " Breggin failed to establish that his variation of an accepted > methodology is generally accepted by scientists in the relevant field > as a method for arriving at his conclusion, " she wrote in her opinion > published Sept. 17. > > > > R. Galli, of Goldfein & ph, also served as defense > counsel. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2004 Report Share Posted November 17, 2004 I agree, when I read the Judges decision discounting all of Breggin's work I immediately thought " but all of psychiatry is based on beliefs not scientific fact " Every freaking medical article I read that is used to justify the drug treatments has glaring disclaimers all through them. Basically they don't know why or how but they can tell you that the drugs " appear " to work for this " disorder " that they cannot call a disease because they cannot do a physical test to determine whether it's really there or not. How can one set of conjecture be more valid than Breggin's work is beyond me. Jim > > > What's very scary with this development is that it's setting the > precedent that only findings in a scientific study have validity. As > we well know, clinical trials are conducted by Big Pharma and they > decide what they're going to study. So if a side effect isn't part of > a clinical study it doesn't exist???? THIS IS VERY SCARY!!!Violent > behavior is anecdotally a BIG problem, but we're not naive enough to > think that GSK will do a study to prove it!! > > > > > > > > > > > http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1100136998966 > > > > Pa. Judge: Testimony by Expert Doesn't Measure Up to 'Frye' > > Nann Burke > > The Legal Intelligencer > > 11-12-2004 > > > > > > A Philadelphia judge found an expert's testimony inadmissible in a > medical malpractice case because the methodologies he used " appear to > be nothing more than a few anecdotal references and a cursory review > of several studies tangentially related to " the alleged medical basis > of the lawsuit. > > > > After a Frye evidentiary hearing, Common Pleas Judge F. > threw out the report of R. Breggin, a renowned > psychiatrist who extrapolated about possible permanent effects of > taking benzodiazepines, a class of drugs including Valium, Xanax and > Ativan that are used as antianxiety agents, muscle relaxants, > sedatives and hypnotics. > > > > " Under Frye [v. United States], novel scientific evidence is > admissible only upon a showing that the methodology has gained > general acceptance in the relevant medical community, " wrote in > Vinitski v. Adler. " Breggin's testimony fell well short of the mark. " > > > > The judge also found Breggin's expert report to be " legally > insufficient, " focusing on the treatment provided by the defendant > doctors " not because it ran counter to the acceptable standards of > care but because it ran counter to Breggin's personal ideas and > ideologies of what the standards should be. " > > > > Breggin, from Ithaca, N.Y., is the author of such books as, " Your > Drug May Be Your Problem: How and Why to Stop Taking Psychiatric > Medications " . He's also written " Toxic Psychiatry: Why Therapy, > Empathy and Love Must Replace the Drug " ; " Electroshock and > Biochemical Theories of the 'New Psychiatry;' " and " Talking Back to > Prozac: What Doctors Won't Tell You About Today's Most Controversial > Drug. " > > > > Breggin's report " draws legal conclusions rather than providing > facts which would allow a fact-finder to come to his own conclusion, " > wrote. " A review of the Breggin report does not indicate where > and how the doctors deviated from the standard of care or how harm > was created as a result of the care received. " > > > > granted the defendants' motion for summary judgment, > dismissing the case. The plaintiff has appealed the ruling to the > Superior Court. > > > > H. , a defense counsel, said, " This is the type of case > that the Frye and Daubert standards were created to prevent. " > > > > Gerald B. Baldino Jr., one of the plaintiff's attorneys, disagreed. > > > > Simon Vinitski had sued the doctors in 2001, alleging that the > combination of medication -- Xanax, Prozac, Valium, Tofranil and > Depakote -- they prescribed and he used intermittently over 10 years > to treat anxiety and depression had caused brain atrophy and other > injuries, according to court documents. > > > > Baldino said his client, a former medical physicist at the > Jefferson Medical College, began to exhibit symptoms like those > associated with Alzheimer's disease, but doctors ruled out that > illness and others. > > > > In court, the defendants challenged Breggin's expert opinion. > According to one defendant's motion: " Not only are Dr. Breggin's > assertions condemned by the absence of literature, but also his > arguments are belied by the opinions of other experts in the field of > psychiatric medicine. " > > > > held a Frye hearing June 4 to determine whether the report, > examining " whether prolonged exposure to high doses of > benzodiazepines caused permanent brain injury, " was inadmissible. > > > > noted that the articles Breggin relied on didn't include > relevant clinical or controlled studies, but instead analyzed other > studies that didn't examine permanent brain damage caused by the > drugs. Breggin admitted his methodologies didn't include treating > patients with brain damage caused by benzodiazepine use or conducting > a clinical study of such patients, according to . > > > > Baldino, who represents Vinitski with attorney Francis J. Curran > Jr. of Curran & Rassias, said this is because testing the combination > of drugs his client used would have required human testing. No > clinical studies of the effects of long-term benzodiazepine use had > been conducted, he said. > > > > " But you can look at the effects of short-term use, " said Baldino, > of Sacchetta & Baldino. Considering those short-term studies, " Dr. > Breggin extrapolated that the combining of the medications increases > the toxic effect of the drug, and that the result was that Mr. > Vinitski suffered brain damage. He called it a 'toxic cocktail.' " > > > > found that Breggin's opinions were extrapolations. Under the > Frye standard, experts may only extrapolate when the medical inquiry > is " new or the opportunities to examine a specific cause-and-effect > relationship are limited. " > > > > That was not the case here, said. Studying the effects of > benzodiazepines isn't new, and there are plenty of people who have > been treated with the drugs to participate in studies about the > effects of its long-term use, she concluded. > > > > " Breggin failed to establish that his variation of an accepted > methodology is generally accepted by scientists in the relevant field > as a method for arriving at his conclusion, " she wrote in her opinion > published Sept. 17. > > > > R. Galli, of Goldfein & ph, also served as defense > counsel. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2004 Report Share Posted November 17, 2004 I agree, when I read the Judges decision discounting all of Breggin's work I immediately thought " but all of psychiatry is based on beliefs not scientific fact " Every freaking medical article I read that is used to justify the drug treatments has glaring disclaimers all through them. Basically they don't know why or how but they can tell you that the drugs " appear " to work for this " disorder " that they cannot call a disease because they cannot do a physical test to determine whether it's really there or not. How can one set of conjecture be more valid than Breggin's work is beyond me. Jim > > > What's very scary with this development is that it's setting the > precedent that only findings in a scientific study have validity. As > we well know, clinical trials are conducted by Big Pharma and they > decide what they're going to study. So if a side effect isn't part of > a clinical study it doesn't exist???? THIS IS VERY SCARY!!!Violent > behavior is anecdotally a BIG problem, but we're not naive enough to > think that GSK will do a study to prove it!! > > > > > > > > > > > http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1100136998966 > > > > Pa. Judge: Testimony by Expert Doesn't Measure Up to 'Frye' > > Nann Burke > > The Legal Intelligencer > > 11-12-2004 > > > > > > A Philadelphia judge found an expert's testimony inadmissible in a > medical malpractice case because the methodologies he used " appear to > be nothing more than a few anecdotal references and a cursory review > of several studies tangentially related to " the alleged medical basis > of the lawsuit. > > > > After a Frye evidentiary hearing, Common Pleas Judge F. > threw out the report of R. Breggin, a renowned > psychiatrist who extrapolated about possible permanent effects of > taking benzodiazepines, a class of drugs including Valium, Xanax and > Ativan that are used as antianxiety agents, muscle relaxants, > sedatives and hypnotics. > > > > " Under Frye [v. United States], novel scientific evidence is > admissible only upon a showing that the methodology has gained > general acceptance in the relevant medical community, " wrote in > Vinitski v. Adler. " Breggin's testimony fell well short of the mark. " > > > > The judge also found Breggin's expert report to be " legally > insufficient, " focusing on the treatment provided by the defendant > doctors " not because it ran counter to the acceptable standards of > care but because it ran counter to Breggin's personal ideas and > ideologies of what the standards should be. " > > > > Breggin, from Ithaca, N.Y., is the author of such books as, " Your > Drug May Be Your Problem: How and Why to Stop Taking Psychiatric > Medications " . He's also written " Toxic Psychiatry: Why Therapy, > Empathy and Love Must Replace the Drug " ; " Electroshock and > Biochemical Theories of the 'New Psychiatry;' " and " Talking Back to > Prozac: What Doctors Won't Tell You About Today's Most Controversial > Drug. " > > > > Breggin's report " draws legal conclusions rather than providing > facts which would allow a fact-finder to come to his own conclusion, " > wrote. " A review of the Breggin report does not indicate where > and how the doctors deviated from the standard of care or how harm > was created as a result of the care received. " > > > > granted the defendants' motion for summary judgment, > dismissing the case. The plaintiff has appealed the ruling to the > Superior Court. > > > > H. , a defense counsel, said, " This is the type of case > that the Frye and Daubert standards were created to prevent. " > > > > Gerald B. Baldino Jr., one of the plaintiff's attorneys, disagreed. > > > > Simon Vinitski had sued the doctors in 2001, alleging that the > combination of medication -- Xanax, Prozac, Valium, Tofranil and > Depakote -- they prescribed and he used intermittently over 10 years > to treat anxiety and depression had caused brain atrophy and other > injuries, according to court documents. > > > > Baldino said his client, a former medical physicist at the > Jefferson Medical College, began to exhibit symptoms like those > associated with Alzheimer's disease, but doctors ruled out that > illness and others. > > > > In court, the defendants challenged Breggin's expert opinion. > According to one defendant's motion: " Not only are Dr. Breggin's > assertions condemned by the absence of literature, but also his > arguments are belied by the opinions of other experts in the field of > psychiatric medicine. " > > > > held a Frye hearing June 4 to determine whether the report, > examining " whether prolonged exposure to high doses of > benzodiazepines caused permanent brain injury, " was inadmissible. > > > > noted that the articles Breggin relied on didn't include > relevant clinical or controlled studies, but instead analyzed other > studies that didn't examine permanent brain damage caused by the > drugs. Breggin admitted his methodologies didn't include treating > patients with brain damage caused by benzodiazepine use or conducting > a clinical study of such patients, according to . > > > > Baldino, who represents Vinitski with attorney Francis J. Curran > Jr. of Curran & Rassias, said this is because testing the combination > of drugs his client used would have required human testing. No > clinical studies of the effects of long-term benzodiazepine use had > been conducted, he said. > > > > " But you can look at the effects of short-term use, " said Baldino, > of Sacchetta & Baldino. Considering those short-term studies, " Dr. > Breggin extrapolated that the combining of the medications increases > the toxic effect of the drug, and that the result was that Mr. > Vinitski suffered brain damage. He called it a 'toxic cocktail.' " > > > > found that Breggin's opinions were extrapolations. Under the > Frye standard, experts may only extrapolate when the medical inquiry > is " new or the opportunities to examine a specific cause-and-effect > relationship are limited. " > > > > That was not the case here, said. Studying the effects of > benzodiazepines isn't new, and there are plenty of people who have > been treated with the drugs to participate in studies about the > effects of its long-term use, she concluded. > > > > " Breggin failed to establish that his variation of an accepted > methodology is generally accepted by scientists in the relevant field > as a method for arriving at his conclusion, " she wrote in her opinion > published Sept. 17. > > > > R. Galli, of Goldfein & ph, also served as defense > counsel. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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