Drug distributors strike $300 million opioid settlement with US health
plans
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[August 31, 2024]
By Nate Raymond
(Reuters) -The three largest U.S. drug distributors have agreed to pay
$300 million to resolve claims by health insurers and benefit plans that
they helped fuel the deadly U.S. opioid epidemic, according to court
papers filed on Friday.
The proposed class action settlement with McKesson Corp, Cencora Inc and
Cardinal Health Inc was disclosed in a filing in federal court in
Cleveland, Ohio, and requires a judge's approval.
Those companies had previously agreed to pay $21 billion to resolve
claims by state and local governments accusing them of having lax
controls that allowed massive amounts of addictive painkillers to be
diverted into illegal channels.
Paul Geller, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, said in a statement that
Friday's deal covered third-party payers like union funds that "largely
paid for the overprescribed and overmarketed pills and for the treatment
required when their plan beneficiaries inevitably suffered opioid use
disorder."
The distributors did not admit wrongdoing as part of the settlement. The
$300 million will be paid 38.1% by McKesson, 30.9% by Cardinal and 31%
by Cencora, which was previously known as AmerisourceBergen.
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Used blister packets that contained medicines, tablets and pills are
seen, in this picture illustration taken June 30, 2018.
REUTERS/Russell Boyce/Illustration
The case was among thousands that
have been filed seeking to hold various drug makers, distributors
and pharmacies responsible for a drug addiction epidemic that
resulted in hundreds of thousands of overdose deaths nationally over
the last two decades.
The litigation has resulted in more than $50 billion in settlements,
largely with states and local government.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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