Tennessee sues Walgreens pharmacy chain over opioid distribution
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[August 04, 2022]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - The state of Tennessee sued
Walgreens on Wednesday, accusing the retail pharmacy giant of fueling
the state's opioid epidemic by willfully flooding the market with an
oversupply of prescription narcotics in violation of consumer protection
and public nuisance laws.
According to the lawsuit, Walgreens used its position as one of the
state's largest pharmacy chains to dispense over 1.1 billion oxycodone
and hydrocodone pills within Tennessee from 2006 to 2020, roughly
equivalent to 175 tablets for every resident of the state.
"The sheer volume of opioids that Walgreens released into Tennessee was
unreasonable and highly suspicious on its face," said the 148-page
lawsuit, filed in Knox County Circuit Court. "Walgreens utterly
saturated the state of Tennessee with narcotics."
Tennessee, home to nearly 7 million residents, has been one of the
hardest-hit in the U.S. opioid crisis, documenting at least three opioid-related
overdose deaths every day, according to the lawsuit.
"Walgreens did not flood the state of Tennessee with opioids by
accident. Rather, the fuel that Walgreens added to the fire of the
opioid epidemic was the result of knowing - or willfully ignorant -
corporate decisions," it said.
Walgreens has been the target of similar lawsuits brought by other
jurisdictions.
In May, its corporate parent, the Illinois-based holding company
Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc, reached a $683 million settlement with
Florida to resolve claims that the pharmacy chain exacerbated an opioid
epidemic in that state. But Walgreens did not admit to wrongdoing under
the agreement.
"We will continue to defend against the unjustified attacks on the
professionalism of our pharmacists, dedicated health professionals who
live in the communities they serve," the company said in a statement
emailed to Reuters on Wednesday.
"Walgreens never manufactured or marketed opioids, nor did we distribute
them to the pain clinics and “pill mills” that fueled this crisis," the
company said.
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Tablets of the opioid-based Hydrocodone at a pharmacy in Portsmouth,
Ohio, June 21, 2017. REUTERS/Bryan Woolston/
According to the lawsuit, Walgreens effectively became part of an
"unlawful controlled substance selling scheme" by ignoring numerous
signs of suspicious opioid prescription practices.
The suit cited such "red flags" as a lack of individualized dosing;
multiple prescriptions for the strongest dose available; many
customers with the same diagnosis codes; high percentages of
patients paying in cash; customers frequently seeking early refills;
and customers traveling long distances to fill prescriptions.
Tennessee's greatest jump in opioid dispensing, according to the
lawsuit, coincided with the years 2006 to 2014 when Walgreens
operated as a wholesale distributor for its own pharmacies, thus
occupying two rungs of the supply chain.
Operating some 200 to 300 stores statewide, Walgreens pharmacies
collectively purchased 795 million opioids from distributors during
that period, the suit said. Some were sourced from other
wholesalers, but Walgreens "self-distributed" 81% of its own retail
opioid supplies in that era, according to the complaint.
A similar lawsuit brought against Walgreens and two pharmaceutical
companies by the city of San Francisco is now under consideration by
a federal judge following an 11-week trial during which the two
other firms reached a $58 million settlement with the city last
month.
Separately, a federal court jury decided in November that Walgreens,
along with fellow pharmacy chain CVS Health Corp and discount retail
giant Walmart Inc, was liable for helping create a public nuisance
with an alleged flood of pain pills that wound up on the black
market in two Ohio counties.
It is now up to a federal judge to decide what the companies should
pay.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Additional reporting by
Dietrich Knauth; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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