Abraham Jewett  |  June 24, 2022

Category: Legal News

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White round medicine tablets spilling from medicine on to money.
(Photo Credit: amenic181/Shutterstock)

National opioid settlement funds overview: 

  • Who: States and local political subdivisions are working together to end the opioid epidemic following national opioid settlements. 
  • Why: States are in the process of developing strategies to allocate and/or use the funds made available to them by the national opioid settlements. 
  • Where: Opioid settlements have been made with states nationwide.

National opioid settlements have been made as part of an effort by states and local political subdivisions to resolve the nationwide opioid crisis. 

The settlements have put to bed claims brought against McKesson, Cardinal Health and AmerisourceBergen — the nation’s three largest pharmaceutical distributors.

Claims against drug manufacturer Janssen Pharmaceuticals and its parent company Johnson & Johnson were also resolved as part of the national opioid settlement.

The settlements provide “substantial funds” to both states and subdivisions as a way to help abate the nationwide opioid epidemic and create change in the way drug manufacturers and distributors conduct business. 

Pharmaceutical distributors must pay up to $21 billion over the next 18 years while J&J is required to pay as much as $5 billion over “no more than nine years,” according to the official national opioid settlement website

Around $22.8 billion of the settlement funds will go toward state and local subdivisions while at least 85% of all the funds going to the states will be required to be used to reduce the opioid epidemic.

Drug distributors were required to make an initial deposit of settlement funds into escrow by no later than the end of September of last year while more payments were made by J&J and distributors this summer. 

Opioid settlement funds distributed differently state by state

The decision on how settlement funds will be used varies by state to state with some opting to distribute the cash to participating state and local governments working to end the opioid epidemic. 

Arizona, for example, adopted what it is calling the One Arizona Distribution of Opioid Settlement Funds Agreement to “establish binding terms” for the distribution of the settlement funds with participants. 

“The State and the Participating Local Governments share a common desire to abate and alleviate the impacts of the Pharmaceutical Supply Chain Participants’ misconduct throughout the State of Arizona,” states a document explaining the states’ fund distribution agreement. 

Additional states with allocation agreements include Virginia, Idaho, Illinois and New Mexico, among others. 

State, local governments adopt memorandum of understanding

Other states, such as Arkansas, chose to enter into a memorandum of understanding between their state, counties and cities in an effort to “establish a proposed framework for funding programs at a state-wide, regional and local levels.” 

Arkansas’ memorandum of understanding explains how both state and city officials “share a common desire” to put an end to the opioid crisis. 

Additional states that have adopted a memorandum of understanding on how to distribute settlement funds include Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Kansas and Maine, among others. 

States pass legislation in wake of national opioid settlements

States have also proposed legislation in the wake of the national opioid settlements meant to help end the opioid epidemic. 

Georgia, for example, passed a bill designed to help the state combat the opioid epidemic by granting more funding for prevention and treatment, along with additional resources being made available to law enforcement agencies. 

The legislation will also help ensure that the state receives funds promised to them in an opioid related settlement. 

“It is imperative that the state receive the full amount of any opioid settlement, and in order to do so, the state must be able to release claims for all state and local public bodies and instrumentalities in the state,” Georgia says in a court document. 

Additional states that have passed new legislation in the wake of the national opioid settlements are Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky and Louisiana, among others. 

Opioid distributors agree to terms in class action settlements

In May, Native American tribes agreed to a settlement worth almost $590 million with J&J and other major opioid distributors they accused of exacerbating an opioid epidemic in their communities. 

Last September, meanwhile, a U.S. bankruptcy judge said he planned to approve a bankruptcy plan made by Purdue Pharma in the face of a number of class action lawsuits accusing it of bearing responsibility for the opioid epidemic

By approving Purdue Pharma’s bankruptcy plan, the judge protected the pharmaceutical company from facing ongoing and future opioid-related class action lawsuits. 

In October 2020, Purdue Pharma previously agreed to plead guilty to criminal charges stemming from its marketing and distribution of the painkiller Oxycontin as part of a settlement agreement worth more than $8 billion

Have you been affected by the nationwide opioid epidemic? Let us know in the comments! 


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90 thoughts onNational opioid settlement funds to be used for remediation efforts

  1. Jose Godinez says:

    I have been using oxycodone 10 mlg for over 13 years in ruined my life, my marriage and was left with nothing living in the streets fighting to survive that plus the withdrawal are pretty much killing me .

  2. Sabrina Addison says:

    It would be nice to know when we are getting what we were promised! We have been waiting over three years for this settlement and was even included in another settlement along the way praying it’s before Christmas but I highly doubt it but either way it should be coming soon! No amount of money is ever going to cover the pain in the heartache that we went through but it’s at least something I guess?!

  3. Penny fox says:

    I took them for years please add me

  4. DeeAnne Flowers says:

    I never had a chance to be a child my mother has never been sober . At the age of 12 she was given an opiate and when she was pregnant with me she was still using . I’m 45 and she has been prescribed every opiate there is to be prescribed she’s had so many issues that they just fed her with pain pills over and over again if it wasn’t enough they increased it sad to say but it seem like I had a heroin addict for a mother all my life. No one thinks about us children who suffer behind parents who were suffering. Emotionally mentally physically I don’t have a mother because of these pain pills that were prescribed to her over and over again and which pain management is in control of to this very day

  5. Shannon Nichols says:

    I was prescribed Oxycodone in 2012 for My Degenerate Disc Disease and Sciatic and other Chronic Pain then was in a Car Accident in 2013 and my Oxycodone My was lowered and then Prescribed OxyCottins the Gel Coated Medication until I 2019 then Weaned Myself off of them and Now Deal with My Pain that’s to the Extreme that I Constantly battle with the want of those medications from the Time I wake Up until the time I go to Sleep on a Daily Basis and don’t ever think this epidemic will ever end for myself or anyone that was Prescribed these Opioid medications or not prescribed them will Suffer Tremendously for the remainder of their Lives!

  6. Theresa Cline says:

    The mother of my son was also taken off her prescription painkillers hydrocodone and put on Suboxone because she was pregnant with my little boy and she is 4 months pregnant and has been on it ever since and my little boy supposedly has hearing trouble and we both have teeth trouble because we were both on it

  7. Justin Null says:

    I was addicted to oxicontin, hydrocodone, perkacet. Also was prescribed hydrocodone several times and then tried methadone til I was told suboxane was a way better solution to my oioid dependency and been on that and subutek for several years every since then.

  8. Heather Chambless says:

    My doctor’s and dentist began prescribing me Vicodin when I was 12 because I was allergic to Tylenol 3. By the time I was 16 I was being prescribed 8 mg Dilaudid tablets. After that I was getting narcos pretty regularly for anything. I never had any major accidents that would require me needing these for pain it was just for basic pain needs. I wish I would have known prior what I was getting myself into a lifelong battle with opiates. By the time I was 18 I was a full-blown heroin addict. Luckily I got clean with the help of methadone. I truly believe if my doctors never put me on the Vicodin to begin with I would have never had the life that I have. I would have never had to know what addiction actually was. Those doctors destroyed my life and has impacted my children’s lives.

  9. Mary Fuentes says:

    I previously filed for the opioid class action. Since then i have had to now take Suboxone for the past 6 yrs.

  10. Roy McCall says:

    Add me please . Previously was on opioids for over 12 consecutive yesrs

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