A Scathing Rejection of the Case Against Four Drug Companies Highlights Misconceptions About the 'Opioid Crisis'
A California judge said the four jurisdictions that filed the lawsuit failed to prove a "public nuisance" or "false advertising."

Since 2014, thousands of state and local governments have sued pharmaceutical companies they blamed for causing the "opioid crisis" by exaggerating the benefits and minimizing the risks of prescription pain medication. Given the enormous volume of lawsuits and a pending $26 billion multi-jurisdictional settlement involving four of those companies, you might surmise that there must be something to this accusation. If so, you should read the 42-page ruling that a California judge issued yesterday in response to the lawsuit that started this flood of litigation.
The details are indeed damning, but not in the way you might expect. Orange County Superior Court Judge Peter J. Wilson's scathing rejection of the case against four drug manufacturers highlights some of the misconceptions underlying the false narrative that blames pain treatment for a surge in opioid-related deaths that is better understood as a predictable result of the war on drugs.
In a complaint that was originally filed seven years ago, Orange, Los Angeles, and Santa Clara counties, joined by the city of Oakland, argued that the companies they sued created a "public nuisance" by encouraging increased use of their products through a false or misleading marketing campaign. The four jurisdictions sought more than $50 billion in damages. Following a bench trial that began on April 19 and wrapped up at the beginning of last month, Wilson concluded that the plaintiffs had failed to prove any of their allegations.
Regarding the public nuisance claim, Wilson notes that both the federal government and the state of California have determined that the benefits of prescribing opioids for medically appropriate uses outweigh the attendant risks. Yet the plaintiffs argued that they did not need to show the defendants had caused harm by encouraging medically inappropriate prescriptions. That is clearly wrong, Wilson says:
Even if any of the marketing which caused an increase in the number, dose or duration of opioid prescriptions did include false or misleading marketing, any adverse downstream consequences flowing from medically appropriate prescriptions cannot constitute an actionable public nuisance. This is so because, as the Federal government and the California Legislature have already determined, and as this Court finds, the social utility of medically appropriate prescriptions outweighs the gravity of the harm inflicted by them and so is not "unreasonable" or, therefore, enjoinable….
The mere proof of a rise in opioid prescriptions does not, without more, prove there was also a rise in medically inappropriate opioid prescriptions. Plaintiffs made no effort to distinguish between medically appropriate and medically inappropriate prescriptions. There is simply no evidence to show that the rise in prescriptions was not the result of the medically appropriate provision of pain medications to patients in need….
Plaintiffs proffered no evidence that the allegedly false or misleading marketing by Defendants caused the writing of medically inappropriate prescriptions.
Wilson likewise found no evidence to support the plaintiffs' "false advertising" claims, which were based mainly on statements the companies made in training materials for sales representatives and literature aimed at doctors. He goes through the allegations against each of five companies: Endo, Teva USA, Cephalon (which Teva acquired in 2011), the AbbVie subsidiary Allergan, and the Johnson & Johnson subsidiary Janssen. Again and again, Wilson concludes, the plaintiffs misrepresented what the companies had said, took it out of context, or falsely asserted that truthful statements were inaccurate or deceptive. A few examples give you a sense of how frivolous the plaintiffs' charges were.
"Clinicians who had been incorrectly trained to believe that taking opioids for a prolonged period would always result in addiction were surprised that most of these patients never exhibited any signs or symptoms of addictive disease," Allergan said in a 192-page training manual for sales reps who handled Kadian, an extended-release version of morphine. The plaintiffs flagged that statement as false or misleading. It is neither.
Wilson notes that one of the plaintiffs' experts, Anna Lembke, "testified that one in four patients prescribed opioids would become addicted." But "as Defendants point out, the studies relied upon by Dr. Lembke for that conclusion are inadequate to support it." Wilson says "the more reliable data would suggest less than 5%, rather than 25%." But either way, "addiction based solely on the patient having been prescribed opioids does not occur in 'most of these patients.'"
The same document discusses "pseudo-addiction," a concept that the plaintiffs portrayed as false or misleading. But as Wilson notes, "this is a medically recognized term, describing a condition where a patient seeking more or stronger opioid medication might be doing so because their pain is undertreated, and not because they have or are developing an abuse disorder." California's legislature "itself recognized this condition, without using the term 'pseudoaddiction,' in Health and Safety Code section 18 11156(b)(2): '[A] person whose drug-seeking behavior is primarily due to the inadequate control of pain is not an addict within the meaning of this section.'"
According to a 31-page sales training document, Janssen's Nucynta ER, an extended-release version of tapentadol, "is indicated for the management of moderate to severe chronic pain in adults when a continuous, around-the-clock opioid analgesic is needed for an extended period of time." Although "that was the FDA approved use," the plaintiffs still claimed this statement was false or misleading.
Regarding another Janssen training document, Wilson notes that "Plaintiffs identify as false or misleading any statement that can be interpreted as saying that a particular opioid product improves function." Yet "it seems beyond debate that for a patient whose pain has been sufficiently controlled that they are able to resume some of the basic functions of life—shopping, cooking, cleaning, and so on—that patient's function has improved."
The plaintiffs even took issue with this balanced statement from Endo's Responsible Opioid Prescribing, a Physician's Guide: "Patients in pain who rely on opioids for analgesia and improved function deserve access to safe and effective medication; to deprive them of optimal pain relief certainly does them harm. Yet these same life-restoring medications carry the potential to do grave harm to patients who may be at risk for addiction and abuse." Wilson notes that the handbook includes "numerous" other mentions of "the critical need to balance pain relief on the one hand with the attendant risks of the medication."
The plaintiffs said journal advertising for Duragesic, Janssen's fentanyl patch, was false or misleading. Yet the plaintiffs' own expert witness, Matthew Perri, "found that the claims in Janssen's marketing materials track the FDA-approved labels fairly consistently" and said he "did not see any indication of Janssen failing to include important safety information in its marketing pieces."
And so on:
Plaintiffs' characterization of the statements is inconsistent with the statements themselves, and again ignores context….
The Court finds none of the identified statements to be false or misleading….
Read in the context of the entire document, the Court finds none of the identified statements to be false or misleading….
Nothing in the challenged statement is shown to be inaccurate….
The Court finds nothing false or misleading in the statements cited from these
documents….The Court finds nothing false or misleading in this document….
The Court finds nothing false or misleading in the statement cited from this document.
You get the idea.
One of the prevailing defendants in this lawsuit, Johnson & Johnson, is appealing a 2019 decision in which an Oklahoma judge said it should pay $572 million for its part in that state's opioid-related problems. The evidence in that case was similarly flimsy.
Cleveland County District Court Judge Thad Balkman faulted Johnson & Johnson for suggesting that prescription opioids pose a "low danger" when used for legitimate medical purposes, even though there is plenty of evidence to support that claim, whether we are talking about the risk of addiction or the risk of a fatal overdose. He also thought the company was wrong to say opioids could be appropriate for treating chronic pain (something that California law explicitly allows, as Wilson notes) and wrong to suggest that undertreated patients might look like addicts as they desperately sought relief (the "pseudo-addiction" concept that California likewise recognizes, as Wilson also points out).
Johnson & Johnson said Wilson's ruling shows that its marketing has been "appropriate and responsible." Yet the company is keen to put the final touches on that $26 billion settlement I mentioned. Although its products account for less than 1 percent of prescription opioids, its share of the settlement is much bigger: $5 billion, or 19 percent.
That fact alone suggests such payouts have little to do with a fair allocation of blame. And as Wilson's ruling shows, Johnson & Johnson's eagerness to eliminate this liability risk should not be interpreted as evidence that the case against the company is strong. The same goes more generally for the case against pain treatment as the main cause of opioid-related deaths, which overwhelmingly involve illicit fentanyl.
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The ruling was a tough pill to swallow.
Take one of their pills. You'll feel better.
I can only read your puns in small dosages.
Speaking of Big Pharma, Jen Psaki, fully vaxxed just caught the COVID.
Psaki psays pshe’s psick?
How the shit did I miss this news?
The US Food and Drug Administration announced the resignations of two top vaccine officials on Tuesday, and reports said the two were leaving in anger over the Biden administration's plan to roll out COVID-19 booster shots before officials had a chance to approve it.
Dr. Marion Gruber, the director of the FDA's Office of Vaccines Research and Review, and her deputy, Dr. Philip Krause, plan to leave the FDA in October and November. BioCentury first reported the news on Tuesday.
In a letter announcing the resignations obtained by the biotech-industry publication Endpoints, Dr. Peter Marks, the director of the FDA's Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, praised the pair for their work during the COVID-19 pandemic. He didn't give a reason for their departures.
That was quite a while ago.
Yeah, how was this not a major international headline?
It undermined Fauci's Lysenkoist policies.
To be fair- it is not clear why they resigned. I have not seen a primary source like a resignation letter. I have seen everything from "they were planning to leave anyways" to "they didn't get along with their boss" to "various disagreements with the Whitehouse".
Now, to be to be to be to be fair, maybe they're just miffed about an interagency turf spat, and they don't give two shits about whether or not the boosters will cause birth defects.
I'm just... trying to imagine the hellstorm of news if this had happened under Trump.
It was. I don't know how you missed it either.
But you're being slightly misleading about it; Biden had been making it clear he thought boosters should be approved, but he wasn't planning on rolling it out without approval.
The difference in opinion came because some experts (not all) don't think boosters should be allowed for preventing mild and moderate infections (ridiculous), because they think antivaxxers aren't just giving bad faith bullshit when they say booster approvals are making them not get 1 and 2, and because of vaccine equity where they simply don't want anyone getting boosters until poor countries are vaccinated, regardless of whether supply is issue holding that up or not (it's 'or not').
Far out, man.
Guess he's livin' on a prayer. He'll either be dead or alive.
The news of this cuts like a knife.
None of my concern. It's his life.
Andy Slavitt is now towing the goalposts behind a Ford Raptor with the gas pedal pushed to the floor.
*brrrunnnununununun brunnnununun*
Huh...
They were trespassing on public property and deserved it.
There were some very fine people on both sides.
TO BE SURE
Merriam Webster just changed its definition of "anti vaxxer"
The new definition:
: a person who opposes the use of vaccines or regulations mandating vaccination
Fuck. Yes.
This isn't a problem caused by corporations. It is a problem caused by government fiat. So fucking what if someone needs some opiate to get through life? Why the hell is it government's compelling interest to protect people from managing chronic pain with a damn pill- addictive or not?
The government didn't stop people from being addicted to opiates. The government- through threats to doctors- chased many of my friends and family from doctors who managed their treatments to street dealers selling poison. I periodically camp with someone dear to me. They have had a rough life full of hard knocks and bad decisions, but on net they have been tough and reliable for their friends and family- always there to help and never leaving another high and dry. I have watched this person transition from opiates prescribed to their doctor, to buying pills off friends, to buying pills off friends of friends. I fear for the day when this person is stuck buying fentanyl off the streets. It will kill them, and the government has the power to stop it.
There is no fucking reason for the government to do this. With a doctor's help this person was living a perfectly fine life- no different than people I've met managing issues with pot or alcohol. No they are not model citizens, or captains of industry. They also have never done anything bad to anyone but themselves.
The worst F-Y-T-Y from the government is to see them turn around and try to blame the drug makers for this own goal. "How dare you produce bullets! We'd have never shot ourselves in the foot, if you hadn't!" It is a god damn, crying shame.
> There is no fucking reason for the government to do this.
"Love of power" is a reason... especially when couples with the sociopathy to not care about making people miserable.
It's good to know that that the approach of leveling hysterical accusations without evidence doesn't work well in a court of law. At least not all the time.
But sadly the left will keep using it in the court of public opinion, and it will keep working. I know intelligent people who unquestioningly blame opioid addiction on drug companies, greed, capitalism, etc. And I doubt they will be swayed by this result. It goes against their religion.
Like the right isn't every bit as gung ho on the drug war, including with opioids, as the center-left.
The only people even talking about ending the drug war are libertarians and strong progressives. Only Republicans love the drug war even more than Democrats and most libertarians are voting for them, because all they actually care about are the economics, not the civil rights.
If the Left is the problem, why is the government of Texas treating my wife like an addict because of her need for opiods due to a degenerative spinal disease. There aren't many Leftists in Texas government.
Trial Lawyers hardest hit.
As the husband of a chronic pain patient, I know that my wife's opioids are the only thing that allow her to live anything near a normal life.
Unfortunately, government interference and regulation of these medications have reduced her quality of life and had a negative economic impact on us.
While my wife could once be seen quarterly and receive a 90 day supply of her medication, she now must be seen no less often than once a month and may receive only the exact number of pills for the days between appointments (rather than a 60 pills, she gets only 56 because she goes every 4 weeks). In addition, the state now requires she be lab-tested every visit to ensure that she is actually taking the medication and not selling it on the street. All of these add to our medical expenses due to the unnecessary visits and tests.
Beyond that, the FDA ordered a one medication that was more effective than her current ones removed from the market because it was deemed "unsafe" due to it being acquired illegally by junkies who od-ed after they ground pills up to be snorted -- despite it being safe when used as directed.
Of course, these decisions are not made by doctors. Rather they are made by non-physician bureaucrats based upon political considerations rather than best medical practices -- and her doctor must comply with them or lose his license to practice medicine.
This seems like unbelievably good news. I wonder how far it will get? Cheap opioids, along with all other drugs, should be freely available to any/all adults with no prescription from anyone.
AND ALL THE WHILE YOU SMART MOUTHED TURDS MAKE JOKES AND LAWYERS GET RICH & DICK EACH OTHER BACK FORTH, YOUR RULES MAKE IT IMPOSSIBLE FOR PEOPLE THAT ARE REALLY IN PAIN,, SUFFER. WE CANT THE MEDS WE NEED BECAUSE OF THE STUPIDITY LIKE THIS
GET