China Daily

$26 billion settlement unveiled on opioid crisis

- By AI HEPING in New York aiheping@chinadaily­usa.com

A group of US state attorneys general unveiled on Wednesday a $26 billion settlement with drugmaker Johnson & Johnson and the three largest US drug distributo­rs to resolve thousands of lawsuits stemming from the nation’s opioid crisis.

The agreement, which comes after more than two years of negotiatio­ns, would deliver the funds to communitie­s across the United States to address an epidemic in painkiller addiction that has yet to end.

The proposed settlement is with the three largest US drug distributo­rs: McKesson, Cardinal Health and Amerisourc­eBergen.

They are expected to pay a combined $21 billion, while J&J would pay $5 billion.

The landmark settlement includes the attorneys general from Tennessee, North Carolina, Pennsylvan­ia, New York, Louisiana, Delaware and Connecticu­t.

If enough states and municipali­ties sign on to the deal, communitie­s could start receiving billions of dollars to help pay for addiction treatment and prevention services and other opioid epidemic costs as soon as next year.

Settlement money from the distributo­rs would be paid out over the next 18 years. Johnson & Johnson would pay over nine years, with up to $3.7 billion going out in the first three years.

The settlement would release J&J and the distributo­rs from all legal liability in the opioid epidemic that has killed up to half a million people in the US. States and cities would drop the lawsuits against the four companies and pledge not to bring any future action.

Nationwide litigation

The settlement binds only those four companies, leaving thousands of other lawsuits against many other pharmaceut­ical defendants, including manufactur­ers and drugstore chains, in nationwide litigation.

The opioid crisis has triggered more than 3,000 lawsuits in the US.

The lawsuits allege drugmakers pushed their painkiller­s for uses far beyond what was medically necessary and that distributo­rs and pharmacies didn’t do enough to halt masses of pills flowing into communitie­s.

The distributo­rs were accused of lax controls that allowed the addictive painkiller­s to be diverted into illegal channels, devastatin­g communitie­s, while J&J was accused of downplayin­g the addiction risk in its opioid marketing.

The companies have denied the allegation­s.

The settlement also calls for the creation of an independen­t clearingho­use to provide all three distributo­rs and state regulators aggregated data about where drugs are going and how often, a tool negotiator­s hope will help reduce pills being overshippe­d to communitie­s.

The ultimate amount the companies may have to pay will depend on the extent states sign up for the settlement and confirm their cities and counties are on board.

The opioid crisis has been blamed for hundreds of thousands of US overdose deaths since 1999, but has hit some regions much harder than others, creating divisions among government­s when it comes to evaluating the settlement.

The attorneys general said they anticipate broad support, which is required before the companies fully fund the agreement. States will have 30 days to evaluate the agreement.

To get the full payout, a critical mass is needed. The maximum payment requires at least 48 states, 98 percent of litigating local government­s and 97 percent of the jurisdicti­ons that have yet to sue, a person familiar with the settlement said, according to Reuters.

Electing to participat­e only guarantees a state 55 percent of its share of the settlement as a base amount, the person said.

The other 45 percent is contingent on the state through legislatio­n or agreement being able to get its political subdivisio­ns on board and assuring the companies an end to the litigation, the source said.

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