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yaz side effects

Yaz/Yasmin Increase Blood Clots 75 Percent

Yaz and Yasmin are the controversial birth control products made by Bayer and a new FDA safety report finds the pills may increase the risk of a blood clot (venous thromboembolic events) by as much as 75 percent when compared to the older generation of birth control pills.

Yaz and Yasmin contain the synthetic hormone, drospirenone. Last year the contraceptives were the second best selling drug for Bayer.

In this latest study involving 800,000 women, birth control pills containing the progestin drospirenone increased the risk of blood clots by as much as 75 percent over birth control pills that used progestin levonorgestrel. The risk for a heart attack or stroke was doubled in women new to birth control and some of the heart problems were seen in as little as three months after beginning Yaz or Yasmin.

That study is coupled with one from The British Medical Journal that also shows an increased risk of blood clots and will be considered by a U.S. Food and Drug Administration expert panel meeting in December to consider whether or not Yaz and Yasmin are a defective product and should remain on the market.

Florida Product Liability Lawsuits

The Florida yaz side effect attorneys at Farah & Farah understand that hundreds of defective product lawsuits have been filed on behalf of women who suffered blood clots, heart attacks, and/or death after taking Yaz and Yasmin.

A product can be defective in its design, its manufacture, or in a failure to warn about the side effects. In these complaints, the women allege Bayer did not issue an adequate warning about the side effects including the risk of blood clots. In the U.S., pharmaceutical companies are allowed to advertise direct-to-customer on television, which is an aggressive marketing tactic that encourages consumers to ask for a drug, even though it may not always be in the consumer’s best interest.

Source: http://www.fda.gov/downloads/Drugs/DrugSafety/UCM277384.pdf


New Birth Control From Bayer After Yaz Fiasco

By Florida Products Liability Attorney on September 3, 2010

Bayer Healthcare is promoting a new birth control pill that promises to be an improvement over its former blockbuster, Yaz. If the thousands of product liability lawsuits filed against Yaz are any indication of what’s to come, that is not promising much.

The new pill is called Natazia. It contains a form of estrogen never before used in an oral contraceptive.

Bayer was known to make many far reaching promises in its ads for Yaz. After the birth control pill was marketed in 2006, it quickly became a best seller bringing Bayer $800 million in profits last year. The Jacksonville Yaz side effect attorneys at Farah & Farah are representing women in product liability cases who have been injured by the contraceptive’s dangerous side effects such as blood clots.

Like Natazia, Yaz was also a new chemical formulation and was promoted for multiple purposes. Brightly colored balloons in the commercial promised women would be able to say goodbye to headaches, a bad complexion, muscle aches, acne bloating, an increased appetite, and feeling anxious and moody. NPR quotes Ruth Day of Duke University, a professor who advises the FDA as saying that she has never seen an ad that makes such sweeping claims.

The FDA said the ads were misleading and the agency ordered Bayer to run a corrective commercial. But the original ad was effective.

And the side effects were profound. Women who took Yaz and a similar pill, Yasmin, suffered a 64% higher risk of blood clots than those women taking pills that were developed decades earlier, according to research published in the British Medical Journal. Bayer disagrees with the findings.

NPR reports that there are 2,700 women suing Bayer over Yaz. Not surprisingly, sales have dropped so Bayer is launching its new birth control pill.

Warning- Natazia has only been tested on 3,000 women pre-market and contains hormone combinations never used before. Does this sound familiar?