Times Colonist

Ex-U.S. health chief: doctors wrote excessive prescripti­ons for opioids

- CUNEYT DIL

West Virginia’s former health commission­er described a culture of doctors for years writing more opioid prescripti­ons for their patients than necessary in a landmark trial in which local government­s accuse three large drug distributo­rs of fueling the U.S. opioid epidemic.

Dr. Rahul Gupta testified Thursday that doctors had a “culture of attempting to reduce pain to a level of zero for every American, for every West Virginian.”

The “intent was good — for good doctors. But because of that intent, they wrote prescripti­ons” for longer than needed, he added. “The bad doctors are writing regularly and ritually a large amount of prescripti­ons.”

It was the fourth day of the trial in Charleston, and it featured cross-examinatio­n of witnesses from defence attorneys and testimony from a quick emergency response worker who treats overdoses in Huntington.

Similar lawsuits have resulted in multimilli­on-dollar settlement­s, but this is the first time allegation­s have wound up at federal trial. The result could have huge effects on hundreds of similar lawsuits that have been filed across the country.

Cabell County and the city of Huntington argue that drug distributo­rs Amerisourc­eBergen Drug Co., Cardinal Health Inc. and McKesson Corp created a “public nuisance” by flooding the area with 80 million opioid doses over eight years and ignoring the signs that the community was being ravaged by addiction.

Attorneys for the companies attempted to show that West Virginia may have had a higher need for the opioid painkiller­s than other areas, owing to the state’s aging population and the many workers in coal mining and industrial sectors. They questioned Gupta on the witness stand for several hours.

They also addressed the issue of opioid withdrawal afflicting infants whose mothers were using opioids during pregnancy. Timothy Hester, an attorney for McKesson Corp., said the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention never ruled out the use of opioid prescripti­ons for pregnant women, even as it urged caution.

Gupta said there were an array of “additional risks,” including withdrawal effects, for babies exposed to opioid prescripti­ons in the womb, adding that the grave risks should be deeply considered by physicians and patients.

Huntington was once ground zero for the addiction epidemic until a quick response program that formed in 2017 drove the overdose rate down.

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