CEO Tab
  • Home
  • Prime News
  • International Market
  • Special Report
  • Corporate
  • Opinion
  • Next Gen
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
CEO Tab
  • Home
  • Prime News
  • International Market
  • Special Report
  • Corporate
  • Opinion
  • Next Gen
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
CEO Tab
No Result
View All Result
Home International

J&J agrees to pay $230M to settle New York opioid claim

CEO Tab by CEO Tab
June 27, 2021
in International
0
Johnson and Johnson

The New York attorney general says Johnson & Johnson has agreed to pay $230 million to settle claims that the pharmaceutical giant helped fuel the opioid crisis. T

75
SHARES
1.3k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

J&J has agreed to pay $230 million to New York state to settle claims that the pharmaceutical giant helped fuel the opioid crisis, Attorney General Letitia James said on Saturday.

You might also like

Russia blames sanctions for gas pipeline shutdown

World may soon be teetering on the edge of recession: IMF

Sri Lanka government warns fuel stocks about to run dry

The drugmaker also agreed to permanently end the manufacturing and distribution of opioids across New York and the rest of the nation, James said in a statement announcing the settlement.

The company “helped fuel this fire, but today they’re committing to leaving the opioid business — not only in New York, but across the entire country,” she said.

The deal involving a lawsuit brought by James in 2019 removes J&J from a trial that is slated to begin next week on Long Island — part of a slew of litigation over an epidemic linked to nearly 500,000 deaths over the last two decades.

In its own statement on Saturday, J&J downplayed the attorney general’s announcement. It said the settlement involved two prescription painkillers — developed by a subsidiary and accounting for less than 1% of the market — that are already no longer sold in the U.S.

The settlement was “not an admission of liability or wrongdoing by the company,” J&J said. It added that its actions “relating to the marketing and promotion of important prescription pain medications were appropriate and responsible.”

The settlement was the latest development in the complicated universe of opioid-related lawsuits across the U.S. that has drawn comparisons to the multistate litigation against tobacco companies in the 1990s. It reflects a path being taken by some big drug companies that see settling as in their best interests, in part because that route would likely not cost as much as losing in court repeatedly.

J&J — along with distributors AmerisourceBergen, Cardinal Health and McKesson — made public last year that they were offering a total of $26 billion over 18 years to settle all the cases they face, with the money going to abate the crisis.

Share30Tweet19
CEO Tab

CEO Tab

Recommended For You

Russia blames sanctions for gas pipeline shutdown

by CEO Tab
September 5, 2022
0
Russia blames sanctions for gas pipeline shutdown

Russia has warned that it will not resume gas supplies along a key pipeline to Europe until sanctions are lifted. Moscow has blamed Western countries for its decision...

Read more

World may soon be teetering on the edge of recession: IMF

by CEO Tab
July 27, 2022
0
Nepal to receive Rs 48 billion loans from IMF

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) cut global growth forecasts again, warning that downside risks from high inflation and the Ukraine war were materializing and could push the world...

Read more

Sri Lanka government warns fuel stocks about to run dry

by CEO Tab
July 4, 2022
0
Sri Lanka in an economic emergency as food prices soar

Sri Lanka has less than a day’s worth of fuel left, the energy minister says, with public transport grinding to a halt as the country’s economic crisis deepens....

Read more

Tesla’s 2Q sales drop amid supply chain, pandemic problems

by CEO Tab
July 3, 2022
0
Tesla will no longer accept Bitcoin over climate concerns

Tesla’s sales from April through June fell to their lowest quarterly level since last fall as supply chain issues and pandemic restrictions in China hobbled production of its...

Read more

Florida pension fund sues Musk, Twitter over $44bn takeover

by CEO Tab
May 8, 2022
0
Elon Musk

Elon Musk’s $44 billion buyouts of Twitter Inc. was challenged in a lawsuit by a Florida pension fund that argues the deal can’t close before 2025 because Musk...

Read more
Next Post
Tesla will no longer accept Bitcoin over climate concerns

Tesla 'recalls' vehicles in China for online software update

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Browse by Category

  • Corporate
  • Entertainment
  • Featured
  • International
  • Major Story
  • Next Gen
  • Opinion
  • Prime News
  • Special Report
  • Tete – A – Tete

EDITOR

Manish Raj Poudel
info@ceotab.com
9841317747


PUBLISHED BY

Welcome Group
www.welcomeadnepal.com

Publisher

www.ceotab.com is a premium news portal being run by Welcome Group. The website features quality business/economic news contents,  in-depth profiles of companies, stories of struggle and success of entrepreneurs, articles that assess various dimensions of  the commerce, trade and economy.

Editor

Manish Raj Poudel

info@ceotab.com

9841317747

Sub-Editor

Riza Poudel

poudelriza@gmail.com

Archives

© 2023 CEO Tab. All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Prime News
  • International Market
  • Special Report
  • Corporate
  • Opinion
  • Next Gen
  • Entertainment

© 2023 CEO Tab. All rights reserved.