Benedictin was prescribed to more than thirty-five million American
women from its introduction in 1956 until 1983, when it was withdrawn
from the market. The drug's manufacturer, Merrill Dow Pharmaceuticals, a
major U.S. pharmaceutical firm, joined a list of other companies whose
product liabilities would result in precedent-setting litigation. Before
it was over, the Benedictin litigation would involve 2,000 claimants
over a fifteen-year period. Michael D. Green offers a comprehensive
overview of the Benedictin case and highlights many of the key issues in
mass toxic substances litigation, comparing individual and collective
forms of litigation, and illustrating the misunderstandings between
scientists and lawyers about the role of science in providing evidence
for the legal system.