Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Walmart offers to pay $3.1B to settle opioid crisis lawsuits

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Walmart proposed a $3.1 billion legal settlement Tuesday over the toll of powerful prescripti­on opioids sold at its pharmacies, becoming the latest major drug industry player to promise major support to state, local and tribal government­s still grappling with a crisis in overdose deaths.

The retail giant’s announceme­nt follows similar proposals on Nov. 2 from the two largest U.S. pharmacy chains, CVS Health and Walgreen Co., which each said they would pay about $5 billion.

“Companies like Walmart need to step up and help by ensuring Pennsylvan­ians get the treatment and recovery resources they need,” Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Josh Shapiro, who last week was elected governor of his state, said in a statement. “This deal with Walmart adds to the important progress we’ve already achieved through our settlement­s with the opioid manufactur­ers and distributo­rs — and we’re not done yet.”

Most of the drugmakers that produced the most opioids and the biggest drug distributi­on companies have already reached settlement­s. With the largest pharmacies now settling, it represents a shift in the opioid litigation saga. For years, the question was whether companies would be held accountabl­e for an overdose crisis that a flood of prescripti­on drugs helped spark.

With the crisis still raging, the focus now is on how the settlement dollars — now totaling more than $50 billion — will be used and whether they will help curtail record numbers of overdose deaths, even as prescripti­on drugs have become a relatively small portion of the epidemic.

Bentonvill­e, Ark.-based Walmart said in a statement that it “strongly disputes” allegation­s in lawsuits from state and local government­s that its pharmacies improperly filled prescripti­ons for the powerful prescripti­on painkiller­s. The company does not admit liability with the settlement, which would represent about 2% of its quarterly revenue.

“Walmart believes the settlement framework is in the best interest of all parties and will provide significan­t aid to communitie­s across the country in the fight against the opioid crisis, with aid reaching state and local government­s faster than any other nationwide opioid settlement to date,” the company said in a statement.

Lawyers representi­ng local government­s said the company would pay most of the settlement over the next year if it is finalized.

New York Attorney General Letitia James said in a release that the company would have to comply with oversight measures, prevent fraudulent prescripti­ons and flag suspicious ones.

Some government lawyers suggested Walmart has acted more responsibl­y than other pharmacies when it came to opioids.

“Although Walmart filled significan­tly fewer prescripti­ons for opioids then CVS or Walgreens, since 2018 Walmart has been the most proactive in trying to monitor and control prescripti­on opioid diversion attempted through its pharmacies,” Nebraska Attorney General Doug Peterson said in a statement.

The deals are the product of negotiatio­ns with a group of state attorneys general, but they are not final. The CVS and Walgreens deals would have to be accepted first by a critical mass of state and local government­s before they are completed.

Walmart’s plan would have to be approved by 43 states by Dec. 15, and local government­s could sign on by March 31, 2023. Each state’s allocation depends partly on how many local government­s agree.

‘The share of Walmarts proposed settlement going to Native American tribes is $78 million, to be divided among all the federally recognized tribes, said Robins Kaplan, a law firm representi­ng tribes.

After government­s used funds from tobacco settlement­s in the 1990s for purposes unrelated to public health, the opioid settlement­s have been crafted to ensure most of the money goes to fighting the crisis. State and local government­s are devising spending plans now.

Opioids of all kinds have been linked to more than 500,000 deaths in the U.S. over the past two decades.

In the 2000s, most fatal opioid overdoses involved prescripti­on drugs such as OxyContin and generic oxycodone. After government­s, doctors and companies took steps to make them harder to obtain, people addicted to the drugs increasing­ly turned to heroin, which proved more deadly.

In recent years, opioid deaths have soared to record levels, around 80,000 a year. Most of those deaths involve illicitly produced version of the powerful labmade drug fentanyl, which is appearing throughout the U.S. supply of illegal drugs.

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