Brigette Honaker  |  May 12, 2020

Category: Legal News

Top Class Actions’s website and social media posts use affiliate links. If you make a purchase using such links, we may receive a commission, but it will not result in any additional charges to you. Please review our Affiliate Link Disclosure for more information.

taking pills, opioid settlement purdue

The opioid settlement Purdue agreed to earlier this year is still accepting claims and providing compensation for OxyContin injuries.

Although many Americans are currently dedicating time and energy to mitigating the consequences of the global coronavirus pandemic, an opioid settlement reached with Purdue is accepting claims for potential monetary compensation.

After the company declared bankruptcy, the opioid settlement Purdue began with a $23.8 million ad campaign in September, in an attempt to inform the public of the available compensation. By providing payments to consumers, Purdue has resolved nearly 3,000 lawsuits alleging that their opioids were irresponsibly distributed.

According to plaintiffs in the opioid class action lawsuits, Purdue downplayed the risks of their opioid products and overstated the benefits. As a result, the medications were allegedly prescribed to patients in an irresponsible manner.

This has reportedly contributed to hundreds of thousands of deaths over the past two decades in connection with America’s growing opioid crisis.

A variety of consumers may be eligible for compensation under the opioid settlement Purdue has agreed to fund. Individuals in the settlement include those directly affected or injured by Purdue opioid products before Sept. 29, 2019. Family members of minors or deceased victims are also eligible for compensation.

“A lot of the victims don’t know that they were victimized. They may think that they’re addicts. They may think that they have a moral failing or a character failing,” a lawyer for opioid victims told AP News. “There were people in a boardroom that caused them to become addicted to opioids.”

Companies, governmental units, trusts, and Native American tribes are also eligible to collect compensation from the settlement.

Purdue manufactured a variety of opioid products, including brand names OxyContin, Hysingla ER, Butrans, Dilaudid, Ryzolt, MS Contin, MSIR, Palladone, DHC Plus, OxyIR, and OxyFas. The company also produced a variety of generic medications including the following:

  • oxycodone extended-release tablets
  • buprenorphine transdermal system
  • hydromorphone immediate-release tablets
  • hydromorphone oral solution
  • tramadol extended-release tablets
  • morphine extended-release tablets
  • oxycodone immediate-release tablets
  • oxycodone and acetaminophen tablets (generic to Percocet)
  • hydrocodone and acetaminophen tablets (generic to Vicodin or Norco)

Any injuries or damages resulting from the medications listed above may qualify consumers to recover compensation from the Purdue opioid settlement.

Information about payment amounts is not available. Individual payments will likely vary depending on the injuries sustained as a result of opioid addiction and the documentation available. Claims may need to be validated using medical bills, doctor statements, and other documentation of injuries or damages.

In order to benefit from the opioid settlement Purdue has agreed to, Class Members must file a valid claim form by June 30, 2020. Claim forms can be filed with the settlement online or printed from the settlement website and mailed to the settlement administrator.

pills on prescription form for opioid settlement purdueThe opioid crisis is a serious problem in America, being dubbed an epidemic due to its scope and severity.

People may be prescribed opioids for reasonable issues, but quickly may become addicted to these medications.

This can lead to financial, emotional and even health consequences that follow them for the rest of their lives.

They may even die in connection to their addiction, whether through overdoses or other situations, leaving grieving loved ones behind.

Unfortunately, taking action against the opioid epidemic has been complicated by the global coronavirus pandemic currently plaguing the world. Even worse, a primary care physician recently told Harvard Health that people who are addicted to opioids may be at a higher risk of developing COVID-19.

“Two great epidemics of our generation are intersecting in ways that are additively deadly, and which highlight the urgent ways we must respond to some of the underlying fault lines in our society that are worsening both crises,” Dr. Peter Grinspoon wrote.

Grinspoon, who works in an area of Massachusetts currently experiencing the highest rate of COVID-19 infection, says that the connection boils down to social determinants of health. The CDC notes that these determinants are “conditions in the places where people live, learn, work, and play [which] affect a wide range of health risks and outcomes.”

In essence, people who are addicted to opioids may be at risk of coronavirus complications due to lifestyle factors causing lung or cardiovascular disease, their homeless or poverty status or the fact that they may be incarcerated in jail due to addiction-related charges.

Although the settlement will not cover addiction related consequences from the COVID-19 outbreak, eligible Class Members may be able to recover other compensation during this time.

Are you eligible for payments under the opioid settlement Purdue? Share your experiences in the comment section below.

The settlement Class Members are represented by the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors.

The Opioid Settlement Purdue is In re: Purdue Pharma LP, et al., Case No. 19-23649, in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York.

We tell you about cash you can claim EVERY WEEK! Sign up for our free newsletter.


248 thoughts onPurdue Opioid Settlement Still Accepting Claims

  1. Teri mathews says:

    Add me please

  2. Jody Ezell says:

    Please add me

  3. Tamisha says:

    Please add me in with law seetlement

    1. Tamisha says:

      Please add in for law settlement

  4. nicholas beaver says:

    please add me

  5. Richard Rodriguez says:

    I want to know if I can do anything about Tramadol addiction. My Pain Management Dr just vanished on me. Shut down without any warnings and left me to scramble trying to get my Tramadol before I ran out and started withdrawing. My body is addicted to this crap and he never told me this was an opioid addictive drug or I would have never even taken this. Now I want off and have no clue how to do it without loosing my job, home, and everything else I worked hard to get. If anyone has any info, please share it.

    Thanks

  6. Laurie Wheeler says:

    My doctor had prescribed me. 420 instant opioid a month.
    Then he shut me off without anything for the withdrawals. Omg. I have had the worst 2 and a half years. I have been on opioid sinc3 before2005.

  7. Carol says:

    Please let me know if I can file a lawsuit in Texas. I have copies of prescriptions from pharmacy proving the financial harm I was in, how it took from my children, how I was later diagnosed with adhd, borderline personality disorder because of how my brain is mis wired now. How I would get sick, lost everything…etc…

    Let me know if there’s help please

  8. Christina says:

    The dr. who prescribed me oxycodone committed suicide a few years back. Because he knew he was under investigation for alot iof overdoses.. So he took the easy way out. Now I’m left to deal with this nightmare on my own. He changed my life forever that’s for sure. Not in a good way either. I’m sure the state has received compensation for this. But the people who were truly manipulated and hurt by this medication get NOTHING!! I mean this medication totally rewired my brain and left me addicted. Add me to this lawsuit.

  9. Marco Bryant says:

    Yes please add me. I wrote a comment earlier and was asking why do we need to come here because I thought they were stopped taking people in 2020. If you guys are reading comments and want to talk to the people really and you’re going to follow up on the email address that would be awesome. I was prescribed Oxsee cotton, oxycodone, Dilaudid, Norco tens for for at least six years and then Suboxone with no generic and then buprenorphine for eight more years. I’ve missed out on great job opportunities even with the government and also the military in about a handful of other high-paying jobs that would keep me from being in a deep hole for financial situation that I’m in now. It has caused me relationships with great people friends that I grew up with and and time and reputation that is priceless. It’s worse than anything I can think of to have supper control every second of my life.Do you guys know what I’m talking about on here, you just have to plan even to do something fun with your kids or to go shopping or hell even go to 7-Eleven to get a drink or something. I was voice texting this message so I may be some miss prints but I don’t even feel like rereading it because it makes me so mad at me saying this. Please help

  10. William sharp says:

    Add me to class action for opiods

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. By submitting your comment and contact information, you agree to receive marketing emails from Top Class Actions regarding this and/or similar lawsuits or settlements, and/or to be contacted by an attorney or law firm to discuss the details of your potential case at no charge to you if you qualify. Required fields are marked *

Please note: Top Class Actions is not a settlement administrator or law firm. Top Class Actions is a legal news source that reports on class action lawsuits, class action settlements, drug injury lawsuits and product liability lawsuits. Top Class Actions does not process claims and we cannot advise you on the status of any class action settlement claim. You must contact the settlement administrator or your attorney for any updates regarding your claim status, claim form or questions about when payments are expected to be mailed out.