SAN FRANCISCO – Drugmakers, including Johnson & Johnson, yesterday denied claims they helped fuel the deadly opioid epidemic in the United States through deceptive marketing that downplayed addiction risks as the trial in a suit filed by several municipalities gets underway.
J&J, Teva, Endo and Allergan are accused of trivialising the dangers of long-term use of opioid painkillers to boost sales in a suit filed by three California counties and the city of Oakland. The trial began on Monday.
The complaint seeks billions of dollars in damages for the public impact it says the drugmakers created.
“Defendants prioritised profits over lives and deceived the public about the real dangers of opioids,” said Santa Clara county attorney James Williams in a statement.
Almost 500,000 people in the US have died from overdoses involving prescription or illicit opioids over the past two decades, according to the Disease Control and Prevention Centres. About 50,000 people died from opioid overdoses in 2019 alone.
The plaintiffs – Santa Clara, Los Angeles and Orange counties, as well as the city of Oakland – represent 15 million people, or 40%, of the most populous American state.
In addition to the damages, they are asking for measures to prevent deceptive pharmaceutical marketing practices in the future.
“Blockbuster profits”
“While the use of opioids has taken an enormous toll on California and its residents, defendants have realised blockbuster profits,” the complaint said.
“In 2014 alone, opioids generated US$11 billion (RM45.2 billion) in revenue for drug companies like defendants.”
The suit comes at a particularly bad time for J&J.
The pharmaceutical giant, also tainted by a scandal related to its talcum-based baby power, was hoping to restore its reputation with its coronavirus vaccine.
But the shot has been suspended in the US, pending an investigation, after reports that six women had developed serious blood clots.
In a statement on the opioid case, J&J subsidiary Janssen said it “will challenge plaintiffs’ unverified claims at trial, which do not contain any proof of causation”.
Teva in a statement said “while we do remain eager to identifying collaborative solutions to this crisis, we will vigorously defend... against these unproven allegations in court”.
More than 3,000 suits related to the opioid crisis have been filed in US courts.
In 2019, an Oklahoma judge ordered J&J to pay a US$465 million fine for downplaying the risks of opioids. J&J is appealing. – AFP, April 21, 2021