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* Press release…
Attorney General Kwame Raoul filed a lawsuit against Purdue Pharma L.P. and Purdue Pharma Inc. (Purdue) over its deceptive marketing practices designed to significantly increase prescriptions issued for opioids.
Raoul’s lawsuit was filed in Cook County Circuit Court against Purdue, an opioid pharmaceutical manufacturer based in Connecticut. According to Raoul’s lawsuit, Purdue carried out an aggressive and misleading marketing effort to increase prescriptions of opioid painkillers even as communities throughout Illinois and across the country faced an opioid addiction epidemic.
According to Raoul, between 2008 and 2017, Purdue dispatched sales representatives to Illinois hundreds of thousands of times. Raoul alleged Purdue also funded third-party publications under the guise of educational materials to promote opioids and downplay their risks, using terms like “pseudo addiction.” Sales representatives informed doctors and patients that the risks could be controlled. Despite knowing that its opioid painkillers were dangerous and being misused and diverted, Purdue allegedly targeted doctors with addicted patients and whose patients were diverting drugs for unlawful use. Raoul alleged that Purdue’s tactics tripled prescriptions of its opioids in Illinois.
“Opioid addiction has destroyed lives and families throughout Illinois. Not only was Purdue aware of the dangers associated with its opioid products, but it downplayed those effects and used the opioid epidemic to increase its profits,” Raoul said. “In addition to filing this lawsuit, I will continue to collaborate with attorneys general from across the country to investigate and take action against all of those responsible for our nation’s unprecedented opioid crisis.”
Opioids are often prescribed to treat severe pain, as they reduce the intensity of pain signals reaching the brain; however, they can have serious side effects and are highly addictive. Opioids – such as morphine, hydrocodone, oxycodone, oxymorphone, and methadone – are a class of narcotic drugs that include heroin, some prescription pain relievers and fentanyl.
According to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), more than 130 Americans die each day from an opioid overdose. According to the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH), more than 2,000 Illinoisans were killed by opioid overdoses in 2017. IDPH’s data also shows that between 2011 and 2016, instances of babies born with neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS), which can occur when a newborn is prenatally exposed to opiates, increased by 53 percent. Babies born with NAS experience a variety of medical complications, including withdrawal symptoms, and often require longer hospital stays after being born.
Raoul’s lawsuit asks the court to prohibit Purdue’s deceptive conduct in order to ensure it does not happen again in the future, and to assess penalties against Purdue. Raoul is also asking the court to require Purdue to give up revenues made as a result of the conduct, and pay to help remediate the problem.
* Tribune…
Illinois is late to the game suing Purdue, which last month agreed to a $207 million settlement with the state of Oklahoma, the largest settlement following a deluge of almost 2,000 lawsuits against Purdue regarding opioids that threaten to bankrupt the company. […]
The lawsuit “contains factual errors and gross distortions and misrepresentations based on highly selective excerpting of language from tens of millions of documents,” Purdue spokesman Robert Josephson said in an emailed statement. “The complaint is merely designed to publicly vilify Purdue. The company vigorously denies the allegations in the complaint and it will continue to defend themselves against these misleading and damaging allegations.”
The statement didn’t detail what in the lawsuit was in error.
* Related…
* Metro-east veterans sue drug companies over their opioid addictions: The drug companies specifically marketed to veterans, the suit alleges, because they suffer from chronic pain 40 percent more than non-veterans. Purdue Pharma funded webinars related to veteran pain management where opioids were “pushed on veterans’ prescribers as an effective pain management tool,” the complaint stated. The lawsuit alleged Purdue Pharma and the other drug companies devised a strategy to market to veterans by telling doctors that veterans were “trustworthy” and would not get addicted. The lawsuit further alleged that companies misrepresented the signs of addiction, calling it “pseudoaddiction.” The treatment for pseudoaddiction was more opioids, according to the suit.
posted by Rich Miller
Tuesday, Apr 9, 19 @ 10:32 am
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–Illinois is late to the game suing Purdue,–
Indeed it is. In fact, a bunch of Illinois county SAs — GOP and Dem — sued Purdue and other opioid cartel members back in 2017.
Did Lisa Madigan ever get called out on her lack of interest? I don’t recall an explanation from her.
https://abc7chicago.com/health/several-illinois-counties-sue-drug-companies-doctors-over-opioids/2807753/
Comment by wordslinger Tuesday, Apr 9, 19 @ 10:43 am
Big Pharma is definitely not the friend they want you to think that they are.
Comment by illini Tuesday, Apr 9, 19 @ 10:48 am
Is there a “small pharma?”
Comment by NoGifts Tuesday, Apr 9, 19 @ 10:59 am
What about the doctors?? They are supposed to follow clinical guidelines in prescriptions.
Why is nobody losing their license???
Comment by Fav human Tuesday, Apr 9, 19 @ 11:49 am
- Fav human - Tuesday, Apr 9, 19 @ 11:49 am:
What about the doctors?? They are supposed to follow clinical guidelines in prescriptions.
Why is nobody losing their license???
I’m sorry to say most Physicians get much of their pharmaceutical information from Big Pharma sales reps…and not from medical school.
Comment by Dotnonymous Tuesday, Apr 9, 19 @ 12:11 pm
Hmmm, Illinois sues Purdue Pharma. Purdue Pharma used McKinsey & Company consulting group to help turbocharge opioid sales. Illinois has multiple million dollar contracts with McKinsey.
Comment by Detective Somerset Tuesday, Apr 9, 19 @ 12:21 pm
Purdue will probably go bankrupt and no one but their former creditors and employees will get anything.
Comment by Da Big Bad Wolf Tuesday, Apr 9, 19 @ 12:24 pm
And we hope that our pensions and 401ks and 457 plans don’t hold much of it either.
Comment by NoGifts Tuesday, Apr 9, 19 @ 12:43 pm
History does not repeat, but it does rhyme. Prior to WW2 Germany had a major Opioid crisis as well. An observation which I find disturbing.
Comment by Al Tuesday, Apr 9, 19 @ 1:28 pm
“– Prior to WW2 Germany had a major Opioid crisis as well.–” I have done some reading on this and doubt that this was the case, and certainly not to the extent you represent it to be relative to the US today.
But prove me wrong.
Comment by illini Tuesday, Apr 9, 19 @ 3:57 pm