When a drug hurts many people the same way, the lawsuits are often grouped together. That grouping is called a mass tort. It is not the same as a class action. In a class action, everyone is lumped into one case and usually shares one outcome. In a mass tort, your case stays your own — your injuries, your medical records, and your damages are evaluated individually, even though many similar cases move forward at the same time.
To keep things efficient, federal courts will often combine these cases into a Multidistrict Litigation (MDL). One judge handles the shared pretrial work — gathering company documents, hearing from experts, deciding common legal questions — so the same fights are not repeated thousands of times. After that shared phase, individual cases can be sent back for their own resolution or settlement. The point is leverage: pooled evidence and shared discovery let ordinary patients stand up to a manufacturer with enormous resources.
What this means for you is simple. You do not need to have heard of an MDL, and you do not need a "big" case on your own. If your injury fits a pattern the courts are already examining, joining that effort can be the strongest path forward — and we handle the filing, the deadlines, and the coordination so you do not have to.