Skip to main content

Opioid Discrimination Lawsuit Against Walgreens Dismissed

Opioid Discrimination Lawsuit Against Walgreens Dismissed

Opioid Discrimination Lawsuit Against Walgreens Dismissed

Introduction

A federal court has rejected a proposed class action lawsuit accusing Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc of discriminating against people with disabilities by prohibiting pharmacists from completing high-dose opioid prescriptions.

When requested to fill high-dose opioid prescriptions, a proposed class action lawsuit accused the pharmacy of discriminating against those with impairments. In other headlines, five doctors in West Virginia pled guilty to a pain treatment conspiracy.

The San Francisco district judge's decision came as Walgreens and other drugstore owners faced thousands of lawsuits around the country, accusing them of failing to curb illegal opioid distribution, which leads to drug addiction. It is an epidemic that has killed over 500,000 individuals over the last two decades.

According to federal authorities, the five doctors pled guilty to participating in a painkiller prescription fraud involving clinics in West Virginia and Virginia. From 2010 through 2015, the strategy was linked to the Hope Clinic and involves consuming oxycodone and other prohibited medications for non-medical purposes. Some prescriptions allowed for seven tablets per day, and many Hope sites served an average of 65 or more consumers per day. A 10-hour workday with only one businessman, according to prosecutors in a news release.

According to the Justice Department, a Minnesota man was sentenced to life in prison on Monday for trafficking fentanyl, which killed 11 individuals who thought it was a less hazardous opioid.

At a city public safety committee meeting Monday, the Dallas county district attorney advocated for the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program in the face of the nation's addiction and overdose crisis, which health experts say has increased fentanyl and overdose problems in recent years. Motivated by the growing prevalence of other synthetic opioids.

Comments

Restricted HTML

  • Allowed HTML tags: <a href hreflang> <em> <strong> <cite> <blockquote cite> <code> <ul type> <ol start type> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <h2 id> <h3 id> <h4 id> <h5 id> <h6 id>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.

Latest News

Court Approves $700M Opioid Settlement for Acute Hospitals

Categories: Opioids

A federal court has approved a $700 million class-action settlement that will compensate over 1,000 acute care hospitals for costs related to the opioid crisis.

The settlement consolidates four separate agreements involving major drug…

Philips Settles CPAP Lawsuits Over Toxic Foam for $1.1B

Philips has been embroiled in legal battles following the recall of millions of CPAP, BiPAP, and ventilator devices due to toxic foam degradation.

The breakdown of the foam in these machines may release harmful chemicals, raising serious…

Texas Trial to Decide J&J’s $10B Talcum Powder Settlement

Categories: Talcum

A high-stakes trial in Texas will determine whether Johnson & Johnson (J&J) can resolve tens of thousands of talcum powder cancer lawsuits through a…

🎁 March VIP Medical Record Review Offer – Get 300 Pages Free!         
Includes a Free Life Care Plan Report + 10% Off Future Reviews!

Only 15 Firms Accepted.