Walgreens, CVS, Walmart begin $878 million opioid trial in Ohio
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[May 10, 2022]
By Dietrich Knauth
(Reuters) - CVS Health Corp, Walgreens
Boots Alliance Inc and Walmart Inc on Tuesday begin a first-of-its-kind
trial to determine what the pharmacy chains owe for their role in the
opioid epidemic in two Ohio counties, which are seeking $878 million.
A federal jury decided in November that the companies helped create a
public nuisance with an alleged flood of addictive pain pills that wound
up on the black market, in the first trial the companies faced over the
crisis.
The jury did not decide how much the companies should pay to help
alleviate the health crisis, which will now be determined by U.S.
District Judge Dan Polster, marking the first trial to separately
determine what the pharmacy chains owe after having been found liable.
Ohio's Lake and Trumbull Counties want the pharmacy chains to fund a
$878 million five-year plan that includes treatment for addiction and
overdoses, resources for law enforcement and healthcare providers, and
employment training for addicts. Walgreens, CVS and Walmart countered
with an offer of a one-year program to buy back unused prescription
opioid drugs in the two counties. They argue that Ohio's public nuisance
law only requires them to stop the nuisance identified by the jury - an
oversupply of prescription drugs - and not to address all of its
negative effects.
CVS, Walgreens and Walmart have denied the counties’ allegations and
said they would appeal the November verdict.
The companies argued that if they must do more than buy drugs back, they
should not be forced to cover costs related to illegal drug use. They
also said the counties have overstated the costs of their five-year
plan.
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The U.S. opioid epidemic has caused
more than 500,000 overdose deaths over two decades, according to
government data. More than 3,300 opioid lawsuits have been filed
nationally against drugmakers, distributors and pharmacy chains,
leading to a wave of proposed settlements.
CVS and Walgreens recently agreed to pay more than $1.1 billion to
settle an opioid lawsuit by the state of Florida, the first time
that pharmacy chains have reached a statewide settlement of opioid
claims.
The Ohio counties’ public nuisance theory has
rarely been tested at trial, and it has had mixed results in other
courts.
Oklahoma's top court on Nov. 9 overturned a $465 million judgment
against Johnson & Johnson, and a California judge in November ruled
in favor of four drugmakers in a case brought by several large
counties.
A New York jury in December found drugmakers Teva Pharmaceutical
Industries Ltd and AbbVie Inc responsible for causing a public
nuisance in the state, although the amount they must pay will be
determined in a trial later in 2022.
(Reporting by Dietrich Knauth; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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