Lawsuits against the makers of Yaz, Yasmin, and Ocella continue to accrue across the
Since the
Since the late summer of last year, there has been growing public concern over widespread use of Yaz and associated incidents of severe medical problems. Yaz, its predecessor, Yasmin, and the generic version, Ocella, have all been linked to strokes, heart attacks, pulmonary embolism, thrombosis, cardiac arrhythmia, gallbladder disease, kidney failure and sudden death.
One study has shown that Yaz, Yasmin, and Ocella are more likely to cause dangerous health problems than other hormonal oral contraceptives. The manufacturer, Bayer, adamantly rejects any such finding and has funded alternative studies that have reached the opposite conclusion.
The relative amount of risk involved in taking these drugs may still be up for debate, but regardless, Bayer’s actions have been cause for concern. For example, Bayer has been reprimanded by the FDA for having engaged in a misleading advertising campaign. That campaign, despite its disingenuous marketing approach, helped to make Yaz the most popular oral contraceptive in the United States. Furthermore, Bayer has been reprimanded by the FDA a second time for using a German manufacturing facility that does not adhere to minimum health and safety standards set by the FDA. Specifically, the way in which the facility calculates variability in ingredients does not meet American standards.
Above all, the simple fact that thousands of women across the United States are alleging that they were harmed by Yaz, Yasmin, or Ocella is enough to raise questions about the safety of these drugs.
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