| Product Defect Case Over Ear Candle Cleared for Trial |
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The unusual product liability lawsuit of a woman who was injured by an ear-cleaning procedure using a special candle is heading for trial on the issue of whether a health store sold her an ear candle with inadequate instructions and warnings. ![]() A judge ruled earlier this week that Anne Danaher cannot claim a Wild Oats Markets store in Kansas City is liable for selling what was, in and of itself, an unreasonably dangerous product. She suffered a burned ear drum when hot wax from the candle ran into her right ear. Waxse also allowed Danaher to proceed with a negligence claim against Kenney, who followed the instructions for ear-candling in “A History of Ear Candles,” a pamphlet handed out at her mother's health food store. In a deposition, Danaher was asked whether her injury was caused by the acts or omissions of Kenney or by the ear candle itself. “In reality, it was caused by Karen Kenney by how she allowed it to burn down and it started melting the wax and it rolled down into my ear,” she replied. “Ear-candling” has become a trendy alternative to Q-tips, with advocates saying the warmth and suction from the heat generated by the flame draws wax out of the ear canal. But Canada has banned the treatment and the FDA warned last year that ear candles “can cause serious injuries, even when used in accordance [with] manufacturers' directions.” In arguing that all ear candles are defective, Danaher cited a letter from the FDA to Wally's and the expert testimony of Dr. Richard J. Wiet, an otolaryngologist who wrote in a report that “Ear candles are unreasonably dangerous products because of the potential for damage to the structure of the middle ear associated with their use.”
By Matthew Heller |