Purdue Pharma owners up opioid settlement offer to $6 bn

The owners of Purdue Pharma, maker of OxyContin, have offered to pay up to $6 billion to victims of the US opioid crisis to settle an avalanche of litigation, according to a report filed Friday by a federal mediator.

The Sackler family’s new offer would raise by at least a billion dollars a $4.5 billion bankruptcy settlement thrown out by a US in December over language that would have shielded the family from further lawsuits involving the highly addictive prescription painkiller.

Under the new proposal, the Sacklers “would be paying, in total, not less than $5.5 billion and up to $6 billion”, according to Friday’s filing to the US Bankruptcy Court in the Southern District of New York.

But while a “supermajority” of involved parties have agreed to the deal, all eight US states involved along with the District of Columbia would need to sign off for it to move forward, the report filed by US Bankruptcy Court Judge Shelley Chapman states.

The additional funds would be used “exclusively for abatement of the opioid crisis, including support and services for survivors, victims, and their families”, according to the report.

The opioid addiction crisis has caused more than 500,000 overdose deaths in the United States over the past 20 years.

Facing thousands of lawsuits, Purdue filed for bankruptcy in 2019, and it pled guilty to three over its aggressive marketing of OxyContin in 2020.

In December, US Judge Colleen McMahon ruled that the who approved the original plan three months earlier had no authority to prevent future lawsuits against the Sacklers, except in cases of intentional misconduct.

While more than 40 states had signed off on the rejected deal, a group of eight, along with the District of Columbia, refused to accept it.

William Tong, the Connecticut attorney general who led the appeal against the earlier ruling, called its overturning a “seismic victory for justice and accountability”.



© 2022 AFP

Citation:
Purdue Pharma owners up opioid settlement offer to $6 bn (2022, February 20)
retrieved 8 March 2022
from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2022-02-purdue-pharma-owners-opioid-settlement.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
Chinese party newspaper quotes hope for better relations with the US after the release of Huawei's chief financial officer thumbnail

Chinese party newspaper quotes hope for better relations with the US after the release of Huawei's chief financial officer

Meng Wanzhou ist nach ihrem fast dreijährigen lockeren Hausarrest in Kanada zurück in ihrer Heimatstadt Shenzhen. Mengs kurze Ansprache am Flughafen illustriert die Untrennbarkeit zwischen Partei, Staat und Unternehmen in China. Meng Wanzhous Rückkehr nach China wurde zur patriotischen Feier. XinhuaRot war Meng Wanzhous Kleid, als sie das Flugzeug verliess, rot waren der Teppich und…
Read More
COVID Vax in Parents Provides Strong Protection for Children thumbnail

COVID Vax in Parents Provides Strong Protection for Children

Editor's note: Find the latest COVID-19 news and guidance in Medscape's Coronavirus Resource Center. Parents who keep up to date with their COVID-19 vaccines may help protect their unvaccinated children from the disease in the process, new research shows. Having one fully vaccinated parent reduced the risk for infection with the original strain of SARS-CoV-2…
Read More
Lockdowns hit Pacific islands as COVID-19 defences falter thumbnail

Lockdowns hit Pacific islands as COVID-19 defences falter

Credit: CC0 Public Domain Lockdowns in Samoa and the Solomon Islands were extended Tuesday as COVID-19 outbreaks worsened in remote Pacific island nations that have previously held the pandemic at bay. Pacific nations, many just dots in the vast ocean, successfully used their isolation as a buffer to the pandemic when they closed their borders…
Read More
Universidades no consiguen terapeutas para el creciente número de estudiantes en crisis thumbnail

Universidades no consiguen terapeutas para el creciente número de estudiantes en crisis

Al principio de su primer trimestre en la Universidad de California-Davis, Ryan Manríquez se dio cuenta que necesitaba ayuda. Una suma de presiones —evitar covid-19, superar una ruptura afectiva, lidiar con una discapacidad, tratar de mantenerse al día con un exigente calendario de clases— lo golpeó duro. “Sentí el impacto de inmediato”, dijo Manríquez, de…
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share