And So It Begins- Doctors To Be Named In Class Action Lawsuits for Prescribing Opioids

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Aether2000

algosdoc
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From the Washington Post
By
Lenny Bernstein
Jan. 8, 2020 at 11:30 a.m. EST
Major drugstore chains — which face an October trial in the mammoth federal opioid litigation — have sued doctors across northeast Ohio, claiming that physicians are the real culprits in the nation’s deadly drug epidemic.
CVS, Walgreen Co., Walmart, Rite Aid and other major pharmacy chains said opioid prescribers bear responsibility for the prescription narcotic crisis, but unlike the drugstores, have not been sued by Cuyahoga and Summit counties. In legal papers filed Monday, they contended that doctors and other prescribers should have to pay some of the penalty if the drugstore chains are found liable at trial.
The doctors in the nearly identical lawsuits are unnamed, identified only as “John and Jane Does 1-500.” The drugstores said they would name them if it became apparent during legal proceedings who they are.

“In a misguided hunt for deep pockets, without regard to actual fault or liability, plaintiff has elected not to sue any of these other parties,” attorneys for drugstore chains said in the papers.
Drug manufacturers and distributors agreed or were ordered to pay hundreds of millions of dollars in settlements and one court verdict reached in state and federal courts last year. But the big pharmacy chains have not been held liable so far.
More than 2,500 cities, counties, Native American tribes and other groups have filed federal lawsuits against companies throughout the drug industry over the epidemic, which has resulted in the overdose deaths of more than 400,000 people over the past two decades. Those cases have been consolidated in a sprawling “multidistrict litigation” before U.S. District Judge Dan Aaron Polster in Cleveland.

Polster has been urging all sides in the complex legal battle to reach a settlement. At the same time, he has designated the two northeast Ohio counties as “bellwether” plaintiffs, whose litigation would serve as a test case of how dozens of other parties might fare if their lawsuits come to trial.
In the first of those trials, mainly against companies that distribute drugs to pharmacies, hospitals and elsewhere, a last-minute settlement was reached in October between the counties and five companies. Walgreen Co., the only pharmacy chain named as a defendant in that case, did not participate in the deal.
In 2018, Cuyahoga and Summit counties sued the major drug chains, alleging they failed to halt diversion of prescription narcotics to the black market as they distributed drugs to their own stores. But Polster allowed them to amend their accusations to include failures by pharmacists in dispensing the drugs, as well. That prompted the new lawsuit.

“This complaint is required to respond to the unsubstantiated allegations by plaintiffs that pharmacists should not have filled prescriptions, written by doctors, for FDA-approved opioid medications,” Phil Caruso, a spokesman for Walgreen Co., said in an email Tuesday. “We strongly believe that the overwhelming majority of prescriptions dispensed were properly prescribed by doctors to meet the legitimate needs of their patients.”
On Wednesday, the lead attorneys for the municipalities suing the drug industry said in a statement that many groups have some responsibility for the drug epidemic. But, they said, “the origins of the opioid crisis and the fuel that spread the epidemic can be traced back to the behavior and practices of corporations in the drug supply chain. Without widespread wrongdoing by the opioid industry—including pharmacies—we would not be in the place we are today.”
Only doctors and some physician assistants and nurse practitioners can prescribe narcotics, and the drug industry has long attempted to pin much of the blame for the epidemic on them. But federal regulations assign pharmacists a “corresponding responsibility” to ensure that prescriptions are legitimate and help prevent diversion of painkillers to illicit users and dealers.

Despite that regulation, the pharmacy chains are trying to argue in the new legal papers that “we’re not gatekeepers, we’re just toll collectors,” said Elizabeth Chamblee Burch, a University of Georgia law professor who has followed the national opioid litigation closely. She said dragging doctors into the fray also could help the chains’ legal strategy by making the case more complicated.
“It seems to both try to pass the buck onto these third-party doctors, and put the onus on the plaintiffs to identify them,” she said.
Alexandra Lahav, a professor at the University of Connecticut School of Law who also follows the case, said the companies may be signaling to Polster that if pharmacists are going to be held responsible for their dispensing activity, they will want to examine the prescribing habits of doctors across the two counties — a seemingly huge task.

“This is an illustration of how complex and maybe impossible it may be to prove the underlying claim that Cuyahoga County is trying to prove against these drugstores,” she said. “Are we going to question every time we dispensed a drug over a 20-year period?”
In the lawsuits against doctors in the two counties, the chains noted the counties did not sue independent drugstores, pill mills, Internet pharmacies, clinics and other practitioners, though they provided more than 40 percent of the opioids dispensed in Cuyahoga County and more than 60 percent of the opioids dispensed in Summit County.
Nor did the plaintiffs identify a single prescription that was improperly filled, they said. The counties’ case relies more on statistical modeling and government data that they said reveals that millions of doses of narcotics were illegally diverted while the drug industry did little to stop the flow.
 
We all know who the real winners will be in all of this..
 
Looks like we need medical tribunals to protect the doctors. Or some form of unionization to fight big industry, hospitals, and pharma.
 
I know i am an outlier, but i see a connection between this and putting docs in jail for life. Society sees bad outcomes as a result of bad behavior, and bad behavior as a consequence of being a bad person. The polarization of American life extends not just to political parties. "physicians are the real culprits in the nation’s deadly drug epidemic." That means jail sentences if you have been paying attention. Kansas doctor sentenced to life in prison for patient death
 
There have been a number of physicians charged and some convicted in the criminal justice system for overprescribing opioids. There have also been physicians charged and found guilty of wrongful death for overprescribing in the civil system. This new wave of litigation against physicians en masse for simply prescribing opioids is something that unfortunately I predicted years ago would happen. It is likely this tactic of deflection of culpability by pharmacies will will spread widely throughout the US and eventually the cities, counties, and states will aim their civil litigation guns directly at physicians who have prescribed opioids in the past, regardless of the degree of injury to patients, if any at all.
 
If anyone is concerned about the Kansas doctor and the same thing happening to you... read from article below


One man told investigators that he met with Henson for about five minutes at the Rock Road office, and that he lied about having a neck injury. Henson didn’t ask him to fill out paperwork, didn’t request medical records, didn’t evaluate him and didn’t have a prescription pad.

The next day, the man went to Henson’s North Ridge office and received prescriptions for methadone and other drugs and gave the doctor $100. He kept some of the medicines but gave most of the other drugs to his brother to sell, the document said. The man said it took three weeks to sell the drugs “because Henson has so many patients that there were just too many pills on the street in Wichita,” it said.


On Feb. 24, 2015, a Wichita police detective saw Henson drive from his home to his North Ridge office, where he met with Nicholas McGovern before the clinic opened. The detective followed McGovern to a convenience store near the doctor’s office. McGovern met with a couple who get prescriptions from Henson.

According to a confidential informant, “McGovern meets with Henson and receives multiple prescriptions for multiple people,” the document said.

The people whose names were on the prescriptions “give all or part of the controlled substances from the prescription to McGovern to use or to illegally sell.”

One informant said Henson “would have a glass of scotch during their visits
 
If anyone is concerned about the Kansas doctor and the same thing happening to you... read from article below






One informant said Henson “would have a glass of scotch during their visits
I don't really see a problem unless it was blended
 
Seems like if the pharmacies actually move to sue a ton of docs it would make it harder for pharmacies to negotiate a decent settlement for themselves as it would increase their culpability. I mean, if they identify a group of docs who are a flagrantly crossing the bounds of typical prescribing patterns...and those patterns are so bad that the docs can easily be identified and grouped together...then why wouldn't the pharmacies have raised the alarm about them before everything got so out of hand rather than continuing to fill those scripts?
 
Since the government's litigation against pharmacies is not based on flagrant over dispensing, it appears the pharmacies plan on suing everyone who prescribed opioids in the area but is not based on flagrant over-prescribing. This has the potential to involve hundreds of thousands of doctors doctor's nation-wide if it expands to other areas.
 
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Since the government's litigation against pharmacies is not based on flagrant over dispensing, it appears the pharmacies plan on suing everyone who prescribed opioids in the area but is not based on flagrant over-prescribing. This has the potential to involve hundreds of thousands of doctors doctor's nation-wide if it expands to other areas.

Is this why you got out of the pain business?
 
No, but not prescribing any opioids, not having an endless parade of humanity begging for opioids since their pain doc was jailed or their PCP suddenly stopped prescribing, and dealing with the incessant and repetitive lies is a delightful bonus!
 
this strikes me as an attempt to obfuscate and divert to reduce pharmacy risks more than anything else.

"yea I sold him the dope, but Joe down the street told him where to find me." hopefully, the judge will see through this and, btw, let the pharmacies know that they are only on the hook for $$ - doctors sued by DEA or DOJ completely lose their ability to work, and sometimes their freedom.
 
The powers above will “control” every medication we have. Gabapentin is next. NSAIDs have all kinds of black box warnings.

Yet, marijuana is all the rage in spite of ongoing recent literature exposing psychosis, GI syndrome, DPH driving risks(all well known but ignored) .

Makes no f..kin sense what society wants from us ...
 
It was not long ago that doctors were being sued for "Under" prescribing opioids. Now, we will be sued for prescribing at all.
Yup, JACO 7/10 VAS recommended ER admission for pain management ... those were the days .
 
Yup, JACO 7/10 VAS recommended ER admission for pain management ... those were the days .

Oh boy, what do I do about all the 15/10's that walk into my office unassisted with nary a grimace or groan to be had? Immediate intrathecal morphine?
 
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