CVS and Walgrens still need to held to account
By
Phil Mattera for the Dirt
Diggers Digest
zipsonic |
The
assumption used to be that the main retail culprits were small pharmacies in
places such as West Virginia that readily filled far more oxycontin
prescriptions than would be expected to arise from legitimate use in their
communities. Those businesses, like the unscrupulous clinics that wrote the
prescriptions, are often called pill mills.
A
decision just handed down by a federal court in San
Francisco indicates that our understanding of that phrase needs to be revised.
Following a bench trial, U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer ruled that the
giant pharmacy chain Walgreens improperly dispensed hundreds of thousands of
suspicious prescriptions for narcotic painkillers in the Bay Area over more
than a decade.
“In exchange for the privilege of distributing and dispensing prescription opioids,” Judge Breyer wrote, “Walgreens has regulatory obligations to take reasonable steps to prevent the drugs from being diverted and harming the public. The evidence at trial established that Walgreens breached these obligations.”
Those
regulatory obligations come from the Controlled Substances Act (CSA), a federal
law which regulates the distribution of drugs ranging from Xanax to fentanyl.
As shown in Violation Tracker, the U.S.
Justice Department and the Drug Enforcement Administration have brought about
two dozen successful CSA actions against large pharmacy chains, including those
operated by the big supermarket companies.
In
2013 Walgreens had to pay $80 million to resolve a DEA case
involving what the agency called “an unprecedented number of
record-keeping and dispensing violations.” CVS, another pharmacy goliath, has
paid out over $130 million in a dozen CSA cases.
These
amounts are likely to be dwarfed by the damages against Walgreens in the San
Francisco case, which have yet to be determined. Walgreens and CVS, along with
Walmart, are also embroiled in an opioid test case brought by two counties in
Ohio. The plaintiffs are seeking a payout of several billion
dollars to help pay for addiction services.
If
those Ohio counties are successful, it would give a green light to several
thousand other cases that have been filed around the country and are being
treated as a multidistrict action. On top of that, Walgreens, CVS and Walmart
are facing a slew of opioid cases brought by the Cherokee Nation and other
tribes.
It
is unlikely that Walgreens or CVS will suffer the same fate as Purdue Pharma,
which had to file for bankruptcy and agree to turn itself into a public benefit
company while its owners, the Sackler Family, had to promise to pay out
billions. CVS, which generated nearly $8 billion in profits last year, is
particularly well positioned to handle the massive settlements to come.
The
real question is whether it and Walgreens will own up to their misconduct and
get serious about complying with their obligations to prevent opioid abuse.