Baltimore Sun

Babies add complicati­on in opioid case

Lawyer for infants wants their legal action separated

- By Geoff Mulvihill

The expansive court case seeking to hold drugmakers responsibl­e for the nation’s opioid crisis has a new complicati­on: How does it deal with claims covering the thousands of babies born addicted to the drugs?

Attorneys representi­ng the children and their guardians want their claims separated from the federal case in Cleveland that involves hundreds of local government­s and other entities such as hospitals. They told a skeptical panel of judges in New York on Thursday that they have different legal issues, a need for faster relief because the babies need services in the first years of their lives. They also told the judges that as it is, they lack the leverage to exact a settlement from drug companies.

Babies, unlike government­s or businesses, have been directly harmed by the actions of drugmakers and are entitled to their own payments, said Scott Bickford, a lead lawyer for the children.

Bickford said more than 150,000 babies were born in opioid withdrawal from 2012 through 2016, and that the number grows yearly.

He said initial hospital stays for babies born to an addicted mother can cost $200,000 to $250,000 more than other infants born without complicati­ons.

“Then you have to address their developmen­tal and learning problems,” Bickford said in a Tuesday interview. “A lot of them have organ problems. A lot of them have problems we don’t even know about.”

Drug manufactur­ers and distributo­rs oppose creating a new structure for the lawsuits over the children and judges on the Judicial Panel on Multidistr­ict Litigation hearing the matter in New York on Thursday wondered what good it would do.

Opioids — including prescripti­on painkiller­s, heroin and synthetic substances including fentanyl — killed nearly 48,000 Americans last year, according to the U.S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The cost of treatment, providing an overdose antidote, foster care, jail stays, ambulance runs and addressing a growing homeless crisis have added up for government­s and taxpayers. Studies have found that opioid addiction also has depleted the workforce, harming the economy.

More than 1,400 plaintiffs have had their federal cases consolidat­ed under a single judge. They include county and local government­s, hospitals, unions, American Indian tribes and individual­s. Hundreds of others have sued in state courts. Cleveland-based federal Judge Dan Polster has been pushing the parties to reach a settlement.

The judicial panel’s chairwoman, Judge Sarah Vance, said it’s unlikely any settlement would be reached without considerin­g the children.

“It’s hard for me to see how the defendants are going to settle if they’ve got 150,000 children unhappy because their needs are unmet,” Vance said.

Angela Vicari, a lawyer for the drug manufactur­ers, told the judge that she wasn’t aware of the lawyers for the babies seeking to negotiate.

But lawyers for the children said they don’t have a voice in the committee of plaintiffs’ lawyers leading the case, making it hard to request the informatio­n from the industry that they believe would help prove their case. Attorney Kevin Thompson said it’s essential to request informatio­n on any industry laboratory studies on the impact of drugs passed from mothers to children.

Lawyers also worry that any settlement reached by government agencies won’t go to help the people who have been hurt. “They end up paving a road with that,” Bickford said.

One of the lead lawyers for the local government­s, Paul Farrell Jr., said he is trying to get help for children.

He said in an interview that the plaintiffs share a goal: holding drug manufactur­ers liable for the crisis. Unless that happens, he said, no one will get the payouts they’re seeking.

“You’ve only got to shoot the pig once,” he said Tuesday.

 ?? TOBY TALBOT/AP 2013 ?? A panel of federal judges will decide whether to separate babies born to addicted mothers from a larger case.
TOBY TALBOT/AP 2013 A panel of federal judges will decide whether to separate babies born to addicted mothers from a larger case.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States