Walgreens, Teva accused of fueling opioid addiction in quest for new
markets
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[April 26, 2022]
By Dietrich Knauth
(Reuters) -Walgreens Boots Alliance and
Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd ignored the health risks when they
created new markets for opioids, a lawyer for the city of San Francisco
told a judge on Monday during opening statements of the first trial to
target manufacturers, distributors and pharmacies over the addictive
pain medicines.
Richard Heimann, a lawyer for the city, said on Monday that the
prescription drug industry was complicit in expanding the market for
opioids, regardless of the public health risks.
Opioids previously had been restricted for use in surgery, cancer
treatment and end-of-life care, Heimann said. But the pharmaceutical
industry made false claims about the drugs' safety in order to market
the drugs to patients suffering from common and chronic conditions like
lower back pain and arthritis, he said.
"The goal was to create a new market," Heimann said.
San Francisco has said that pharmacy chain Walgreens, drugmakers Teva
Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd and AbbVie Inc's Allergan unit, and drug
distributor Anda Inc, which is owned by Teva, created a "public
nuisance" by flooding the city with prescription opioids and failing to
prevent the drugs from being diverted for illegal use.
The companies have denied the allegations, saying that they sold opioid
medications that were prescribed by doctors. The defendants will make
their opening statements in the case on Tuesday.
San Francisco has been hit hard by the opioid crisis, which has caused
more than 500,000 overdose deaths nationwide in the past two decades,
according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
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People walk by a Walgreens, owned by the Walgreens Boots Alliance,
Inc., in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., November 26, 2021.
REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
San Francisco County received more than 163 million prescription
pain pills from 2006 to 2014, which amounts to 22 pills per resident
per year, according to the city. Opioid-related health issues now
account for 25% of emergency room visits at the city's largest
public hospital, according to the lawsuit.
San Francisco's lawsuit, filed in 2018, initially included claims
against drugmakers Purdue Pharma LP, Johnson & Johnson and Endo
International Plc and the three largest U.S. drug distributors -
McKesson Corp, Cardinal Health Inc and AmerisourceBergen Corp - but
the city previously settled with those defendants.
In one of a wave of opioid settlements, J&J this month agreed to pay
$99 million to settle claims over its part in West Virginia's opioid
crisis..
Alabama reached $276 million in settlements with J&J, McKesson and
Endo after that state opted out of a nationwide $26 billion
settlement of opioid litigation.
Five months ago a California judge held that Los Angeles, Santa
Clara, and Orange counties, as well as the city of Oakland, failed
to prove that Endo, Johnson & Johnson, Teva and Allergan created a
public nuisance through the sale and promotion of opioids pain
medicines.
(Reporting by Dietrich Knauth in New York;Editing by Noeleen Walder,
Bill Berkrot, Howard Goller and Matthew Lewis)
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