Dr. Reddy's resolves U.S.
probe over child safety of drug packaging
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[December 19, 2017] By
Nate Raymond
(Reuters) - Dr. Reddy's Laboratories Ltd
will pay $5 million to resolve U.S. claims that the Indian company sold
prescription drugs in the United States in packaging that was not tested
for child safety, according to court papers filed on Monday.
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The settlement was disclosed in documents filed in federal court in
Trenton, New Jersey, over a year after the U.S. Consumer Product
Safety Commission voted to refer a case involving the drugmaker to
the U.S. Justice Department.
Dr. Reddy's in a statement said that the safety of patients and
consumers was of "paramount importance" to the company. It said it
disagreed with the allegations but agreed to the settlement to avoid
prolonged litigation.
"Dr. Reddy's is not aware of any reports that any child gained
access to these products as a result of the packaging or that any of
the products caused children harm as a result of the packaging," the
company said.
The Justice Department alleged that in 2011, Dr. Reddy's engineers
concluded the packaging for five types of drugs that the company
manufactured and imported for sale would not pass tests required in
the United States to prove child resistance
The Justice Department in a lawsuit said that instead of notifying
the CPSC or the public that its products put children at risk, the
company quietly began altering its packaging while continuing to
sell products in untested packaging.
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The lawsuit said Dr. Reddy's violated the Consumer Product Safety
Act by distributing drugs that did not comply with a law aimed at
protecting children from accidentally ingesting medicines by
requiring those drugs to be in special packaging.
Dr. Reddy's said products with the packaging at issue have not been
distributed since June 2012.
In addition to the $5 million penalty, Dr. Reddy's under the
settlement must maintain a program aimed at ensuring compliance with
consumer protection laws and must have a system to ensure
information is reported to the CPSC.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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