The Day

Fighting big pharma

As communitie­s reel, epic opioid battle moves to an Ohio courtroom

- By KATIE ZEZIMA

The opioid epidemic has affected nearly every aspect of life in Vinton County. Teachers buy shoes for students whose addicted parents send them to school in footwear held together with tape. Overdose deaths have surged. Foster care is overwhelme­d. The jail is bursting at the seams.

The expenses related to caring for the children of drug abusers and locking up drug offenders here eat up about 25 percent of the Ohio county’s $4 million annual budget, a hole that it can’t plug. Now, Vinton officials think someone should help foot the bill: Big Pharma.

“It almost feels like Vinton County was preyed upon,” said Lily Niple, who got addicted to prescripti­on opioids here but managed to push through, having been clean for more than two years. “It’s like a huge exploitati­on of the people here. And it was negligent. Just complete disregard for the future.”

As communitie­s continue to reel and police and emergency responders struggle to keep the addicted alive, the biggest fight against the opioid epidemic is being waged in a federal courthouse in Cleveland, where hundreds of lawsuits brought by cities, counties, Native American tribes and unions have been brought together into one case with a scope that rivals

anything seen in the U.S. legal system.

Vinton County and hundreds of other municipali­ties across the nation are suing companies that manufactur­ed and distribute­d powerful painkiller­s and others up and down the supply chain, arguing that they knowingly peddled massive amounts of a highly addictive product that set in motion a public health crisis. The plaintiffs argue that the vast network of opioid businesses should pay for the damage the drugs wrought.

“This is probably the most complex piece of litigation in the history of our country,” said Paul Hanly Jr., one of the lead plaintiffs lawyers.

The consolidat­ed case is being compared to the one that led to hundreds of millions of dollars in settlement­s against tobacco companies and restricted the sale and marketing of cigarettes. Some of the same tobacco lawyers are now working on the opioids trial.

Plaintiffs are making different, but similar, claims and suing various companies in the drug pipeline. Some allege the drug companies created a public nuisance with their products. Others argue that deceptive marketing led to an epidemic. Some say state consumer protection laws were violated. Some of the lawyers allege that the distributi­on system, which includes wholesaler­s and distributo­rs of powerful narcotics, amounted to a criminal enterprise. A small group is suing pharmacy benefit managers. Some are suing pharmacies. One lawyer is suing on behalf of children born to mothers who were addicted to opioids.

“We brought suit because we recognized that the companies had to both be held accountabl­e for their longterm marketing practices that really created this market and fostered a misleading attitude toward these drugs as a pain management,” said Edward Siskel, the Chicago corporatio­n counsel. “And then to make sure that they reform the industry going forward.”

The Justice Department filed a motion this past week requesting that it be allowed to participat­e in settlement discussion­s as a friend of the court. Attorney General Jeff Sessions said the department would seek repayment for the cost of the drug crisis because the federal government has borne substantia­l expenses.

The sheer number of defendants in the case — more than a dozen — also is staggering and unpreceden­ted. And they could start pointing fingers at one another. They include the manufactur­ers Purdue Pharma and Janssen Pharmaceut­icals, the distributo­rs Amerisourc­eBergen, McKesson and Cardinal Health and pharmacy benefit managers such as Express Scripts.

‘Baseless’ claims

Janssen, in a statement, argued that the claims made against the company are “baseless and unsubstant­iated” and that its marketing and promotion of the medication­s were “appropriat­e and responsibl­e.” Purdue Pharma, in a statement, said it is “deeply troubled” by the opioid crisis and “dedicated to being part of the solution.” Express Scripts said it denies the allegation­s and “will vigorously defend ourselves.”

The Healthcare Distributi­on Alliance, a trade group that represents distributo­rs and is not involved in the litigation, said it “defies common sense” to think that distributo­rs are responsibl­e for the number of opioid prescripti­ons written across the country.

The opioid epidemic kills hundreds of people each day, akin to the 1918 flu pandemic. The judge overseeing the case, Dan Aaron Polster of the Northern District of Ohio, said during a January hearing that this scourge was manmade and that lawyers need to reach a resolution quickly, because approximat­ely 150 people are dying each day.

Greta Johnson, assistant chief of staff to the executive of Summit County, Ohio, said the county has spent nearly $200 million during the past decade trying to keep up with the costs of addiction. That includes a mobile unit for when the morgue is at capacity, as it was five times last year.

“We are literally stacking bodies,” Johnson said. “That was the reason for the lawsuit.”

The crisis also is affecting the national economy, something that could drive a settlement well past record-breaking territory. The White House Council of Economic Advisers estimates that the economic cost of the opioid crisis was $504 billion just in 2015, or 2.8 percent of that year’s gross domestic product. Altarum, a nonprofit organizati­on that studies health care, estimates the opioid crisis cost the country more than $1 trillion from 2001 to 2017.

Attorneys argue that some municipali­ties have spent tens of millions of dollars trying to fight opioid-related concerns. Health care costs for municipal employees have skyrockete­d. Jails are packed. Counties have purchased thousands of doses of a drug used to reverse overdoses, and first responders are working overtime, often reviving the same people over and over again.

Mark Chalos, a lawyer who represents communitie­s in Tennessee and some unions, said the toll is tremendous, “a preventabl­e catastroph­e . . . made entirely by an industry that operates in plain view.”

Complex litigation

The merged federal case is called multidistr­ict litigation, or MDL. Lawsuits of its kind are rare — some lawyers admit they don’t even know what they are — but are increasing as the economy nationaliz­es and courts are being used to solve problems that the government can’t. Other MDLs include litigation surroundin­g concussion­s suffered by NFL players, which was settled for about $1 billion, and lawsuits from the BP oil spill that settled for about the same amount. Judge Polster has overseen two other MDL cases, including a settlement over the use of an injectable medical dye.

How exactly to fix the problem of opioids is the question that Polster and the hundreds of lawyers are trying to answer. The judge has said that he wants to see a speedy settlement and an end to the suffering. Polster is taking a unique tack — he is not interested in litigation for the sake of litigation. Instead, he wants to help solve the crisis and do something to “dramatical­ly reduce the quantity” of opioids being disseminat­ed, manufactur­ed and distribute­d, he said in a January hearing. He also wants to ensure the drugs are being used properly.

“My objective is to do something meaningful to abate the crisis and to do it in 2018,” he said.

Polster wrote in public minutes of a closed-door settlement conference meeting last month that the parties “identified barriers to a global resolution.” The lawyers are now working toward a settlement but also pursing the possibilit­y of litigation on another track. They are preparing for discovery and making known which cases they would like to try first. Polster has put attorneys on an aggressive timeline, scheduling another settlement hearing for May.

113.5 doses per resident

In Vinton County, where 13,000 people live among the rolling hills and creeks, an average of 113.5 doses of opioids were dispensed per resident here in 2012, according to state data. A sign outside the county’s one pharmacy advertises safe prescripti­on week.

Lily Niple was one of the county residents ensnared in the crisis. She started using pills as a “party thing” on the weekends while she was in college and was waitressin­g at a bar. She stopped using when she became pregnant, but she started again after her daughter was born three months premature and she was prescribed opioids after a difficult delivery. She continued to use opioids during two subsequent pregnancie­s and got unexpected­ly pregnant a fourth time.

Family members hung a piñata from a tree for her third child’s first birthday party. Driving around alone after the party, she spotted the heavy-duty yellow rope still hanging from the tree, and she contemplat­ed hanging herself from it. But she was pregnant and thought her unborn child deserved to live, so she drove herself to a hospital. She found sobriety, again, but then relapsed after breaking a rib.

She quit drugs for good in 2016, using a long-acting medication designed to wean substance abusers off opioids and an outpatient rehab program she was ordered to attend as a condition of parole after being convicted of theft. She is now raising her children — ages 4, 5, 8 and 11 — and works with others in the county who are addicted.

“I realize I had a unique position to be impactful in my recovery,” she said.

Opioids are taking a large toll on the children in Vinton; in 2016, there were 202 drug-related child protective services investigat­ions, the vast majority of which involved opioids, said Trecia Kimes-Brown, the county prosecutor. A principal said that a 7-year-old sat in her office and described how to properly shoot heroin — something the child learned from watching it happen at home.

Other children are living in households made chaotic by drugs, forcing teachers to become both counselors and educators. Many students live with grandparen­ts because their parents are addicted to drugs. Children’s services workers are suffering from trauma because of the damage they see, and they don’t know what horrors they will encounter with each home visit.

Sheriff Shawn Justice has worked for the department since 1993. Legally prescribed opioids, he said, have led to abuse, which in turn has led to a rash of illegal consequenc­es, including theft and burglary. People steal painkiller­s from nursing homes or possession­s from their parents to fund black-market purchases.

Pills, he said, led to heroin. There’s now an influx of crystal meth, which is causing people to be extremely violent. He is supportive of the lawsuit and wants to see those in the supply chain pay for what opioids did to his county.

“You’ve got to hold them accountabl­e for it,” Justice said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ANDREW SPEAR FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Lily Niple, 34, who has struggled with opioid addiction, said her hometown in Vinton County, Ohio, feels as if it was “preyed upon” by drug distributo­rs and manufactur­ers. Below, Vinton County often deals with high water at the end of winter. Located...
PHOTOS BY ANDREW SPEAR FOR THE WASHINGTON POST Lily Niple, 34, who has struggled with opioid addiction, said her hometown in Vinton County, Ohio, feels as if it was “preyed upon” by drug distributo­rs and manufactur­ers. Below, Vinton County often deals with high water at the end of winter. Located...
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 ?? ANDREW SPEAR FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Mary Ann Hale, center, assistant superinten­dent and principal at West Elementary in Vinton County, talks about the opioid crisis at a panel of local educators and social workers at the McArthur United Methodist Church.
ANDREW SPEAR FOR THE WASHINGTON POST Mary Ann Hale, center, assistant superinten­dent and principal at West Elementary in Vinton County, talks about the opioid crisis at a panel of local educators and social workers at the McArthur United Methodist Church.

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