Arkansas
sues opioid manufacturers for roles in epidemic
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[March 30, 2018] By
Nate Raymond
(Reuters) - Arkansas' attorney general on
Thursday joined the widening mass of litigation against opioid
manufacturers, accusing three drugmakers of promoting addictive
painkillers in ways that falsely denied or trivialized their risks.
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Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge filed a lawsuit in state
court in Little Rock accusing Purdue Pharma LP, Johnson & Johnson
and Endo International Plc of engaging in misleading marketing
practices.
The case made Arkansas at least the 17th U.S. state to sue
manufacturers of prescription opiods amid a nationwide epidemic of
addiction to the painkillers.
The lawsuit contended the drugmakers spent millions of dollars on
promotional activities that downplayed the risks of addiction
associated with opioids while falsely touting the benefits of using
the drugs to treat chronic pain.
"The reckless actions of these opioid manufacturers have wreaked
havoc upon Arkansas and her citizens for far too long," Rutledge
said in a statement.
Purdue, the manufacturer of OxyContin, denied the allegations in a
statement while saying it is "deeply troubled by the prescription
and illicit opioid abuse crisis."
Johnson & Johnson's Janssen Pharmaceuticals unit - which
manufactures drugs including the opioid Duragesic, a form of
fentanyl - called its marketing activities "appropriate and
responsible." Endo did not respond to a request for comment.
Prescription opioids are intended to treat pain, but the outbreak of
addiction to the drugs has led to a tsunami of lawsuits by cities
and counties. The lawsuits have sought to recoup damages from
drugmakers for their role in the epidemic.
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Opioids were involved in more than 42,000 overdose deaths in 2016,
according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
At least 433 lawsuits are consolidated before U.S. District Judge
Dan Polster in Cleveland, who has been pushing for a quick
settlement and has invited state attorneys general with cases and
probes not before him to participate in the talks.
Plaintiffs' lawyers pursuing the case have generally not quantified
the potential costs involved in the cases but have compared them
with litigation by states against the tobacco industry that led to
1998's $246 billion settlement.
The U.S. Justice Department in a March 1 filing sought 30 days to
evaluate participating in the litigation, citing the "substantial
costs that the federal government has borne as a result of the
opioid epidemic."
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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