Saturday, 24 March 2018

Opioid Crisis Leads Arkansas Cities, Counties to Sue Drug Makers




A coalition of cities and counties around Arkansas announced it had sued dozens of makers and distributors of opioids, arguing that the companies should bear the cost of drug abuse in the state.

The Association of Arkansas Counties and the Arkansas Municipal League announced that 72 counties and 15 cities along with the state filed a lawsuit last week in Crittenden County Circuit Court against the drug firms.

The lawsuit names 65 defendants, including several retailers, pharmacist and physicians. In addition to the cities named as plaintiffs, attorneys said 195 other cities have signed agreements supporting the lawsuit.

The lawsuit accuses drug manufacturers of using deceptive statements to market opioids and failing to disclose the known risks of long-term opioid abuse.

The lawsuit doesn’t specify how much is being sought, but asks that damages be awarded to cover past costs the local governments have incurred as well as future needs such as treatment clinics and hiring additional patrol officers.

“Despite the best efforts of the state, counties and cities, through an allocation of all available resources, the Arkansas opioid epidemic continues to infect Arkansas,” the lawsuit said. “Absent the relief sought in this action, the resources of the state, counties and cities will continue to be inadequate to respond to the epidemic.”

Janssen Pharmaceuticals Inc., one of the companies named in the suit, defended its marketing and promotion of its drugs as “appropriate and responsible.”

“The labels for our prescription opioid pain medicines provide information about their risks and benefits, and the allegations made against our company are baseless and unsubstantiated,” Jessica Castles Smith, a spokeswoman for the company, said in an email. “In fact, our medications have some of the lowest rates of abuse among this class of medications.”

Hundreds of communities around the U.S. have filed similar lawsuits over the opioid crisis. Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge earlier this year retained five law firms to help investigate drug companies, and a spokeswoman said Rutledge was close to taking action on behalf of the state.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last year said Arkansas had the second highest opioid prescription rate in country, with 114.6 prescriptions written for every 100 residents in the state.

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