Pea Ridge Times

Opioid abuse prompts lawsuit

- CECILE BLEDSOE Arkansas Senator

LITTLE ROCK — The manufactur­ers of prescripti­on painkiller­s are facing a barrage of lawsuits from state and local government­s across the United States.

The Arkansas lawsuits allege that the pharmaceut­ical companies used deceptive trade practices to downplay the potentiall­y lethal effects of painkiller­s. As a result, greater numbers of people are addicted to painkiller­s, known as opioids, and greater numbers are dying from overdoses.

In 2016, there were 401 fatal drug overdoses in Arkansas. That is four times the number of Arkansans who died from drug overdoses in 1999.

According to the lawsuit filed by the state attorney general last week, 236 million doses of opioids were prescribed in Arkansas in 2016. That equals about 78 pills for every resident in Arkansas.

In a few rural counties the number of pills sold per capita was much higher, for example, in five counties the average was 150 pills sold per person.

The dramatic rise in abuse of painkiller­s is ruining families and straining the resources of law enforcemen­t agencies and treatment programs. It is the cause of increased visits to hospital emergency rooms, and painkiller­s are showing up more frequently in newborn babies. There are effective antidotes that if applied in time can save the life of a person who is overdosing, but they are expensive.

The attorney general’s lawsuit alleges that the pharmaceut­ical companies committed Medicaid fraud, claiming that Medicaid would not have paid reimbursem­ents for the prescripti­on painkiller­s if the companies had been truthful about the drugs’ effectiven­ess in managing pain over the long term.

Traditiona­lly, the painkiller­s were prescribed for acute pain for short periods. In recent years, according to the lawsuits, the drug companies have marketed the painkiller­s for chronic, long-term pain management, which results in addiction and other serious side effects.

This has increased the market for painkiller­s dramatical­ly, and opioids are now the most commonly prescribed drug in the United States, according to the lawsuit.

A coalition of Arkansas cities and counties also has filed a lawsuit against pharmaceut­ical companies that manufactur­e and sell opioids. On its own, Pulaski County has filed a similar lawsuit.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say that nationally 42,000 people died from opioid overdoses in 2016.

In 2011 the legislatur­e created the state’s Prescripti­on Drug Monitoring Program, and has updated it several times since. Last year lawmakers approved Act 820, which requires physicians to consult with the program before prescribin­g opioids and addictive drugs.

Causing particular alarm is the growing presence of fentanyl, because it is so dangerous and has caused so many fatal overdoses. Abuse of fentanyl caused 20,000 deaths nationwide in 2016, and because of its lethal nature there is now an ongoing debate about the extent to which lawmakers should increase penalties for its distributi­on. Some elected officials and advocacy groups support the death penalty for large-scale dealers of fentanyl.

Nationwide, hundreds of lawsuits have been filed against the drug manufactur­ers. The defendants include some of the most well known and widely traded companies on the stock market.

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Editor’s note: Arkansas Senator Cecile Bledsoe represents the third district. From Rogers, Sen. Bledsoe is chair of the Public Health, Welfare and Labor Committee.

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