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Author Topic: Texas secures $41.5 million settlement from Pfizer and Tris Pharma ...  (Read 13 times)
BADecker (OP)
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November 22, 2025, 09:54:48 PM
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There has been a lot of controversy lately about the fact that Big Pharma is there to make money rather than help people. Some States want to get a share of that money, and help their children, as well. Here's Texas...


Texas secures $41.5 million settlement from Pfizer and Tris Pharma for knowingly poisoning kids with an adulterated ADHD drug



https://www.naturalnews.com/2025-11-21-settlement-pfizer-tris-pharma-adhd-drug-fraud.html
For the parents of a child with ADHD, the daily ritual of administering medication is often a delicate balance, a tightrope walk between managing symptoms and navigating side effects. They place their trust in a system—a doctor's prescription, a pharmacist's dispensation, and the fundamental integrity of the drug maker—believing that the capsule or liquid will deliver what it promises.

But what if the drug maker altered the testing methods to hide the drug's flaws and skirt regulatory scrutiny? This is the case with Pfizer and Tris Pharma, two drug makers who put vulnerable children at risk while defrauding taxpayers with bogus testing methods.

The hidden flaws in the formula

The central figure in this legal drama is Quillivant XR, a liquid stimulant medication designed to help children with ADHD manage their symptoms. For a drug like this, consistency is everything. Its formulation must ensure a controlled release of the active ingredient, methylphenidate, to provide stable symptom control throughout a school day. The lawsuit filed by Attorney General Paxton in November 2023 alleges that for six years, Quillivant XR was anything but consistent. From 2012 to 2018, the drug exhibited a pattern of failing critical quality control tests, specifically those related to its dissolution rate—a key factor in how the medication is absorbed and functions in a child's body.

Rather than addressing the root cause of these failures, the complaint claims Tris Pharma, the manufacturer, and Pfizer, the marketer of the drug, engaged in a deliberate campaign of concealment. They are accused of continually manipulating the drug's testing methodology, a technical but crucial sleight of hand that ensured Quillivant would meet regulatory requirements on paper while masking its underlying deficiencies. This was not a one-time error but a sustained practice of fraud, a shadow operation running parallel to the official manufacturing process.

The lawsuit portrays this as a direct violation of federal and state laws, a fraud designed to keep a flawed product on the market. The human impact of this alleged deception was profound. During these years, families and doctors across Texas reported that the medication seemed to fail in its primary purpose, leaving children struggling with symptoms they believed were being managed. All the while, the companies reportedly possessed internal data and faced federal warnings pointing directly to the manufacturing problems that could cause this very lack of efficacy.
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