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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Wednesday, Jan 8 2020

Full Issue

Major Pharmacy Chains Claim Doctors, Other Providers Are Responsible For Opioid Crisis In New Lawsuit

“The pharmacist is not supposed to be second guessing the medical necessity of the doctor’s prescription," said Timothy Johnson, an attorney for Discount Drug Mart. Walgreens, CVS, Rite Aid, Walmart and others who have found themselves in the cross hairs over who was responsible for curbing the opioid crisis filed their own suit against providers.

The Associated Press: Pharmacies Say Prescribers Bear Opioid Crisis Responsibility

Doctors and other healthcare practitioners who write prescriptions bear ultimate responsibility for improper distribution of opioids to patients, not pharmacists who are obliged to fill those prescriptions, a series of pharmacy chains argued in federal court. The filings, which were submitted Monday to the federal judge in Cleveland who has been overseeing the national opioid lawsuits, asked the judge to rule in the pharmacies' favor and reject claims brought by some Ohio counties. The judge has scheduled an October trial for claims against CVS, Rite Aid, Walgreens, HBC and Discount Drug Mart. (Welsh-Huggins, 1/7)

The Washington Post: Major Drugstore Chains Sue Doctors In Sprawling Federal Opioid Case

“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. (Bernstein, 1/7)

Cleveland Plain Dealer: Pharmacies Facing Trial In Opioid Lawsuits Say Doctors Should Be Held Liable For Epidemic

“We the pharmacies just fill the prescriptions,” said Timothy Johnson, an attorney for Discount Drug Mart. “While certainly we have a limited role in making sure it’s a legitimate prescription, not stolen or forged or whatever, to the extent we can, we do that. “The pharmacist is not supposed to be second guessing the medical necessity of the doctor’s prescription.” (Heisig, 1/7)

In other news on the opioid crisis —

North Carolina Health News: Dentists Join AG In Fighting NC's Opioid Crisis

Dan Cook, an oral surgeon based in Denver, N.C., used to send patients whose wisdom teeth he had just pulled out the door with prescriptions for opioid pain medication to last four days. That added up to about 21 pills per patient, Cook told media crews gathered several weeks ago in the lobby of a south Charlotte Carolinas Center for Oral & Facial Surgery. ...Now as dentists in this state join other health care providers squaring off against the deadly opioid epidemic, they’re looking for different ways to help patients manage pain after wisdom teeth extractions and other oral surgeries. (Blythe, 1/8)

Tampa Bay Times: Thousands Of Opioid Deaths Are Never Counted By Feds, USF Study Says

Drug overdose data is greatly underreported in nationwide statistics, a researcher at the University of South Florida has found. Troy Quast, an associate professor at the USF College of Public Health, found that data related to overdose deaths vary significantly from state to state, masking the size of the crisis. Overdoses are a “bigger problem” than federal statistics make them appear, he said. (Griffin, 1/8)

Politico Pro: NIDA Director: New Pain Meds Are Still Years Away

It will likely take another five to 10 years before new pain medicines that could replace today’s opioids could reach the market, said Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse. That’s the best-case scenario, Volkow told POLITICO in a wide-ranging interview Tuesday. It assumes that medicines that drugmakers already have in phase two and three clinical trials prove to be safe and effective and get FDA approval in five to eight years. (Owermohle and Karlin-Smith, 1/7)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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