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posted by janrinok on Saturday September 21 2019, @10:52PM   Printer-friendly
from the they-must-be-on-drugs dept.

Submitted via IRC for Bytram

Sacklers threaten to scrap opioid deal if they aren't shielded from lawsuits

Lawyers for OxyContin-maker Purdue Pharma filed a new complaint late Wednesday threatening that the company's mega-rich owners, the Sackler family, could pull out of a proposed multi-billion-dollar opioid settlement deal if a bankruptcy judge doesn't shield the family from outstanding state lawsuits.

Purdue's lawyers argue that if the lawsuits continue, the Sacklers will have to waste "hundreds of millions of dollars" on legal costs that could otherwise go to claimants in the settlement. The family's lawyers added that in that event, the family "may be unwilling—or unable—to make the billions of dollars of contributions" to the proposed settlement.

State attorneys general, however, argue that the tactic is yet another move designed to shield the Sacklers and their ill-gotten wealth.

"This filing isn't a surprise. It's yet another effort by Purdue to avoid accountability and shield the Sackler family fortune, and we will be opposing it," Maura Healey, the attorney general of Massachusetts, told the New York Times.

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  • (Score: 4, Interesting) by stretch611 on Sunday September 22 2019, @04:17AM (4 children)

    by stretch611 (6199) on Sunday September 22 2019, @04:17AM (#897004)

    Fortunately, I personally have not been addicted to opioids. There was a time in my past when I had access to as much Vicodin as I wanted, but honestly, I felt it made me sleep more than get rid of the actual pain I was in.

    However, a little over 2 years ago, I was hospitalized for longer than I care to admit...
    After my surgery I had some minor pain; I asked the nurse for some ibuprofen. I was told that I was not allowed it because it was not on the list of approved drugs that was created by the hospital's doctor for me. I asked for tylenol then... same answer. Of course, if I wanted stronger meds including opiates, they were fine and pre-approved by the doctor.

    I had a choice, either get the hardcore stuff, or wait until the next day when the doctor made their rounds and ask them to approve something else.

    Is there any wonder why we have an addiction problem in this country (and others) when relatively mild over the counter pain relievers are harder to get in a hospital than opiates?

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 22 2019, @02:32PM (3 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 22 2019, @02:32PM (#897111)

    I think it's a combination of good intentions and bureaucracy. Having an approved list is important in terms of preventing unforeseen interaction between different pills.

    There's definitely a belief that patients need pain management without always considering the needs of the particular patient. Some of us have pain and discomfort tolerance so high that we barely need any and may be fine being carved up for minor surgery without anything. And then there are others that are so sensitive that they really need the maximum safe dose to get much out of it.

    IMHO, it's incredibly irresponsible of the doctor and hospital to not have somebody available to accommodate a request for safer medication.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 22 2019, @05:35PM (1 child)

      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 22 2019, @05:35PM (#897170)

      My mother had a hospital charge her 400 dollars to hand her, her own purse. In which she pulled out a bottle of generic ibuprofen and took them.

      • (Score: 2) by PartTimeZombie on Monday September 23 2019, @01:58AM

        by PartTimeZombie (4827) on Monday September 23 2019, @01:58AM (#897348)

        My mother had a hospital charge her 400 dollars to hand her, her own purse. In which she pulled out a bottle of generic ibuprofen and took them.

        Jesus! What an awful way to live your life.

    • (Score: 2) by All Your Lawn Are Belong To Us on Monday September 23 2019, @07:14PM

      by All Your Lawn Are Belong To Us (6553) on Monday September 23 2019, @07:14PM (#897742) Journal

      There's something to what you say as far as interactions go, although I don't think there are any that are in common to both ibuprofen and acetaminophen. There could be some conditions like renal failure and ibuprofen has been known to VERY rarely cause liver problems where acetaminophen shouldn't be given with any liver impairment. However, staff who get and deliver pharmaceuticals (doctors / pharmacists / nurses) are trained to know the serious interactions as well as having EMR systems which also check for interactions when new prescriptions are up. Further, if there was a medical or interaction reason for someone to not have the medication then that reason should have been shared.

      There is also something to be said for assessing the source of the pain. "Milder" pain relievers mostly act on the end of the nerves themselves (the receptors), where opiates work on the impulse process at the transmission receptors (mu receptors primarily). So there may have been an assessed reason why surface receptor remedies wouldn't be considered effective.

      There may be other elements of the story at work we don't know, like perhaps other strategies were attempted and/or offered (cool cloths, distraction).

      That that said, this is likely far more about a nurse who was not doing his or her job / refused to call the provider for an order for something milder (and there are other mild pain relievers than ibuprofen, tylenol, and aspirin) - which is within a nurse's discretion. Yes, there are often a spectrum of pain relieving drugs placed into order sets that are available PRN. But there is nothing wrong about asking for alternate medications. Perhaps the nurse had a valid reason not to escalate the request (like wanted to catch the physician on next rounding to put in the request personally), but there had better be a reason why beyond "this is our protocol."

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