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Thursday, April 18, 2024 | Back issues
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Pharmacies Blame Doctors for Opioid Crisis

Doctors and other health care 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 claim in federal court.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Doctors and other health care 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 claim in federal court.

The filings, 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.

Officials from Summit and Cuyahoga counties, home to Akron and Cleveland respectively, say that pharmacies contributed to the addiction crisis by filling prescriptions for an "excessive volume" of opioids written by doctors and other practitioners.

Such allegations ignore the role that cash-for-medication "pill mills" played, along with Internet pharmacies, independent pharmacies, clinics and others, the filings state. In many cases, those entities dispensed medications in greater volume than the chains being sued are accused of doing, the pharmacies said.

The allegations by Cuyahoga and Summit counties also ignore the fact that pharmacies dispensed drugs based on doctors’ prescriptions, who ultimately must bear responsibility, the Monday filing said. All those prescriptions were written by practitioners authorized by the state of Ohio and registered with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, according to the pharmacies.

"A prescription for a controlled substance is an order for a medication that may be issued only by a physician or other authorized healthcare practitioner," attorneys for the pharmacy chains wrote. "While pharmacists are highly trained and licensed professionals, they did not attend medical school and are not trained as physicians."

Attorneys leading the opioid lawsuits said Tuesday their goal continues to be holding pharmacies accountable for not meeting requirements to prevent the diversion and abuse of prescription painkillers.

"Pharmacies saw the devastating consequences of this public health crisis firsthand and we will show they did little to nothing to address them," the attorneys said in a statement.

U.S. District Judge Dan Polster, a Bill Clinton appointee, was scheduled to hear a broader case last year, but most parties settled. Talks continue toward a possible national settlement that could end all the lawsuits related to the epidemic, which has killed more than 400,000 people in the United States since 2000.

Categories / Business, Health, Law, National

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