Missouri could receive $450 million as its share of a nationwide settlement of lawsuits against four companies that manufactured and distributed opioids.
The for their role in the opioid addiction crisis, alleging the companies didn鈥檛 inform customers of how addictive prescription opioids are and didn鈥檛 properly monitor how many pills were being shipped to states.
Missouri officials are still finalizing an agreement with Johnson & Johnson, a drug manufacturer, and the Cardinal Health, AmerisourceBergen and McKesson pharmaceutical distribution companies.
If a settlement with drugmaker Purdue Pharma is finalized soon, it could mean the state鈥檚 total payouts could top $500 million, state officials said.
鈥淥ur lawsuit has always had a singular mission: Attain justice for victims and the families of the victims of this decades-long opioid epidemic that has been unleashed on the people of Missouri by callous pharmaceutical companies,鈥 Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt said Thursday.
Last year, about 2,000 people in Missouri died of drug overdoses, and nearly 73% of those victims had used opioids. Since 2016, about 1,000 people in Missouri have died of opioid overdoses each year.
The potential national settlement comes with several strings attached: Under the terms of the settlement, an unspecified number of states must sign the agreement for it to be binding, according to a .
If enough states sign on, Missouri and other states must ask many cities and towns to drop their own lawsuits against the companies and sign on to the agreement to get the full payout, Schmitt said.
Schmitt is confident many cities and counties will forgo their lawsuits and join the agreement. Local governments have until the end of the year to sign on.
If smaller jurisdictions don鈥檛 sign on, Missouri would receive less than half of the approximately $450 million settlement from the four companies, he said.
Many people became addicted to opioids after using prescription painkillers like those made and distributed by Johnson & Johnson and the three distributors, said Patti Fitzwalter, a St. Louis-area advocate for addiction treatment whose son Michael died of an overdose in 2014.
鈥淥ur son took his grandmother鈥檚 prescription painkillers because they weren鈥檛 locked up,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he transition to heroin, now fentanyl, is easy because it鈥檚 cheaper and easier to get than prescriptions.鈥
The settlement money is desperately needed in Missouri, where addiction treatment is hard to find, she said.
鈥淚 can鈥檛 even begin to express how important this litigation is,鈥 Fitzwalter said. 鈥淲e need so many more treatment centers, in-house rehab facilities for people still struggling, especially for those without insurance.鈥
The settlement funds will be funneled through four state agencies and go directly to drug treatment, education and intervention programs, Schmitt said.
The settlement does not include any admission of wrongdoing by Johnson & Johnson, If the settlement is finalized, the company will agree to stop selling opioids.
鈥淭his national settlement agreement is designed to resolve the vast majority of litigation-based claims regarding the past sales of the Company鈥檚 prescription opioid medications,鈥 company officials 鈥淭his is not an admission of any liability.鈥
Schmitt said that even though the companies have not admitted fault, the settlement is the fastest way to funnel much-needed addiction treatment funding to state agencies.
鈥淭hese pharma companies operated on the basis of greed and misrepresented the addictive nature of these drugs, that鈥檚 what I know,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檓 glad that we鈥檙e able to advocate as hard as for the people of this state and we can find some relief right now.鈥
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