Los Angeles Times

$470 million from CVS part of opioid deal

California to receive settlement amount for pharmacy chain’s role in prescripti­on crisis.

- BY CHRISTIAN MARTINEZ

California is expected to receive about $470 million from a multistate settlement with CVS over allegation­s that the pharmacy chain contribute­d to the country’s opioid crisis, the state attorney general’s office said Tuesday.

Last year, CVS Health and Walgreens agreed to pay about $5 billion each to settle a raft of lawsuits brought by state and local government­s accusing the chains of filling prescripti­ons that should have been flagged as inappropri­ate, helping to fuel an epidemic that has killed more than half a million Americans over the last 20 years.

The funds were to be split among the participat­ing states after they approved the agreements with each company.

“Today, we begin the year with another win in our fight to hold corporate giants to account for their role in fueling the opioid crisis,” California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta said in a statement Tuesday. “The funds from this settlement will help bring muchneeded relief to our communitie­s and will ensure CVS changes its business practices to keep such a crisis from ever happening again.”

Most of the money from the settlement is required to be used for treatment and recovery services for people struggling with opioid abuse.

CVS will be required to implement additional employee training and investigat­e potentiall­y suspicious prescripti­ons. The company’s pharmacies will be subject to site visits and compliance reviews.

Earlier in the long-running U.S. opioid crisis, most overdose deaths involved prescripti­on drugs. Many people with opioid-use disorder moved to heroin as officials and healthcare providers sought to make prescripti­on opioids harder to abuse and obtain.

In recent years, deaths have soared due largely to illicitly produced fentanyl.

Last month, the attorney general’s office announced that California would receive more than $500 million from the Walgreens settlement.

The state is also eligible to receive $265 million from a similar set of lawsuits against Walmart.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States