Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Purdue Pharma starts ad campaign for claims

- Geoff Mulvihill

maker Purdue Pharma launched an ad campaign Monday to tell people harmed by their powerful prescripti­on opioid where they can file claims against the company.

The $23.8 million campaign is part of Purdue’s bankruptcy proceeding­s as it tries to resolve close to 3,000 lawsuits over its role in the opioid crisis.

Notifying people who may have claims against a company is a standard part of a bankruptcy case.

But Purdue’s efforts – worked out with input from a committee of creditors and other interested parties and approved by a bankruptcy judge in White Plains, New York – are unusually expansive.

The Stamford, Connecticu­t-based company proposed a settlement that could be worth more than $10 billion over time, including the value of drugs it is producing and a contributi­on of at least $3 billion in cash from members of the Sackler family that owns the company.

About half the states oppose that deal, saying it doesn’t do enough to hold the company or family responsibl­e in an opioid crisis that has been linked to more than 430,000 deaths in the U.S. in the past two decades.

Online ads that started Monday direct people to a website where claims can be made.

Other versions are to appear later in magazines, newspapers, TV and radio, billboards, movie theaters and other places to let people know they have until the end of June to file claims.

Ads are intended to reach 95% of U.S. adults, with those people seeing or hearing the ads an average of six times. Part of the plan also calls for encouragin­g news coverage of the claim applicaOxy­Contin tions.

Lawsuits against the company have been filed mostly by government­al entities.

But individual­s harmed by the company can also make claims through the bankruptcy process.

It has not yet been ironed out how much of a settlement may be available to private parties, or which people may receive a piece of it.

For instance, it’s still subject to negotiatio­ns on whether people who used OxyContin illicitly would be entitled to the same kind of benefits as those who were prescribed the powerful drug and became addicted.

The heart of lawsuits against Purdue is that the company promoted its drugs to doctors especially in misleading ways, downplayin­g risks and overstatin­g benefits. The company stopped marketing OxyContin about two years ago.

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