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When things go wrong, don’t walk away.
That will only make it harder.
-Robin Lane and the
Chartbusters
I recently wrote about how the makers of OxyContin agreed to
a wimpy $600 million settlement with the federal government. Purdue Pharma, the
makers of OxyContin, were selling an addictive drug. The top executives knew it
was addictive, and the company sold almost $10 billion of the stuff.
Their lawyer, presidential candidate Rudolph Giuliani, negotiated
a plea that kept people at Purdue from going to jail.
Giuliani cut a deal that street pushers would drool over. The
fine is a small percentage of their sales, and the drug is still on the market.
In the language of the street pusher, the people at Purdue
coped a plea, paid a fine and went back on the street.
In the wake of the OxyContin executives’ admission to
committing a CRIME, Congressmen Hal Rogers of Kentucky
and Frank Wolff of Virginia
made a reasonable request.
They want OxyContin to be prescribed only for severe pain, not
moderate pain as it is now.
Rogers
said that one of the advantages of the change would be that it would cut the
number of drugs being diverted to the black market.
Rogers and Wolff asked the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) to look into the matter.
Amazingly, Purdue Pharma, the makers of OxyContin, the same
company that just let Giuliani cop a plea on their behalf, are fighting Rogers
and Wolff.
Instead of thanking God for Rudy’s great connections and the
laptop tendencies of the prosecution, the people at Purdue want the FDA to
ignore the congressmen.
Here is something I can’t ignore. After I wrote my column, I
started hearing from people all over the world.
A reader in Texas
wrote the following:
My
sister was very much addicted to Oxycontin that she was obtaining legally from
her doctor. She was living with my 72-year-old mother as she was unable
to hold a job. Her boyfriend was also addicted to various
drugs. One night she refused to give him more of her Oxycontin, and
he left to later return and cut the throats of my mother and sister.
The OxyContin problem is not
confined to the United
States.
A reader in Canada
wrote:
My son was addicted to Oxycontin for about 3 years. He is 22 months clean now but only
because he is on the methadone maintenance program. We live in a small town and
have to travel 2 hours each way weekly for him to be urine tested and to see
the doctor. He was hooked so hard core, it is amazing he is still alive. He is
clean right now, but he is a totally different person, often filled with anger.
In our town of 6,500 people the drug of choice among our kids is Oxycontin!
Not everyone liked my column. A financial consultant in New York City called me a
jerk but didn’t specify why. Either he likes OxyContin or likes Giuliani. Maybe
both.
An Arizona
reader told me his doctor had prescribed OxyContin for his back pain but that he
was careful to explain that the drug could be addictive. Thus, the man used
OxyContin without incident.
After reading horror story after horror story, I can’t
imagine a scenario where I would willingly take OxyContin. I can understand
doing so if you and your doctor weigh the risks and the benefits.
For moderate pain there has to be a better solution than
OxyContin. Even if the government just limited the supply, it would be a big
step forward.
It takes a lot of gall to keep fighting after your company
and its top executives have agreed to a $634.5 million fine—not to mention the
fact that everyone who was charged was well-connected enough to avoid serving
jail time.
Purdue apparently has that kind of gall.
The people at Purdue admitted to willfully doing something
that harmed people. They ought to do more than pay a fine; they ought to show
leadership and clean up some of the mess they started.
Instead, they want the FDA’s blessing to keep on selling
OxyContin to people with moderate pain.
The people at Purdue need to realize that when things go wrong, you don’t walk away.
That will only make it harder.
Don McNay
is the Chairman of the Board for McNay Settlement Group in Richmond, Ky. You can write to him at
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
or read other things he has
written at www.donmcnay.com. His newspaper column is syndicated in over
200 newspapers.
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