Didn't know there was lawsuits on pharmacies concerning the prescription opioid epidemic. It wasn't "just Giant Eagle.

Back when I had failed back surgery(discectomy...L3/L4) I became addicted . Addicted so much that the I climbed the ladder from tramadal to vicodin to oxycodone to oxycontin to, etc, etc, all the way to 6mg dilaudid(synthetic morphine).......which, after a short time, I became impervious to.

I believe 6mg dilaudid is still the strongest script pain pill???

Back then, if they could, pharmacies would sell you bags full. Heck. I could take 3-5 6mg dilaudid and drive you to Pittsburg and back. You'd never know I was on anything. And, it wasn't just GE. It was prob like 99.9% of all pharmacies.

Pharmacy chain operator Giant Eagle settles Ohio opioid lawsuits mid-trial
By Nate Raymond

Oct 29 (Reuters) - Regional pharmacy chain operator Giant Eagle Inc (GIAEG.UL) on Friday said it had agreed to settle lawsuits accusing it of fueling the opioid epidemic in several Ohio communities, including two counties that had taken it and three larger rivals to trial.

The settlement came during the fourth week of a trial in federal court in Cleveland over claims by the Ohio counties of Lake and Trumbull against Giant Eagle, Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc (WBA.O), CVS Health Corp (CVS.N) and Walmart Inc (WMT.N).

The settlement resolves claims against Giant Eagle in 10 lawsuits by those counties and others in Ohio, the company and the plaintiffs' lawyers said in a joint statement. It operates grocery stores and pharmacies in five states including Ohio.

Financial terms were not disclosed.

"While Giant Eagle denies it was a cause of the opioid crisis, it recognizes the severity of the crisis, its impact on the public and the hard work of the public officials working to address the harms," the company said.

The case underway in Ohio is first trial the pharmacy chains have faced in nationwide litigation over an opioid abuse epidemic that U.S. government data shows led to nearly 500,000 overdose deaths from 1999 to 2019.

More than 3,300 cases have been brought largely by state and local governments against pharmacies, drugmakers and drug distributors.

The Ohio counties claim the pharmacies failed to prevent excessive amounts of opioid pills from flooding their communities or identify "red flags" of misuse. The companies deny wrongdoing.

The three largest U.S. drug distributors - McKesson Corp (MCK.N), Cardinal Health Inc (CAH.N) and AmerisourceBergen Corp (ABC.N) - and drugmaker Johnson & Johnson (JNJ.N) in July proposed paying up to $26 billion to settle cases against them. read more

A bankruptcy judge in August approved a settlement by OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma LP and its wealthy Sackler family owners that the company values at more than $10 billion. read more

Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; editing by Diane Craft and Steve Orlofsky
Our Standards: The

https://www.reuters.com/business/he...io-opioid-lawsuits-mid-trial-2021-10-29/


Let this sink in..... On 12-31-23 it be will 123123.
On the flip side, you can tune a piano but you can't tune-a-fish.