Posted on 01/30/2018 7:28:06 AM PST by markomalley
Over the past decade, out-of-state drug companies shipped 20.8 million prescription painkillers to two pharmacies four blocks apart in a Southern West Virginia town with 2,900 people, according to a congressional committee investigating the opioid crisis.
The House Energy and Commerce Committee cited the massive shipments of hydrocodone and oxycodone two powerful painkillers to the town of Williamson, in Mingo County, amid the panels inquiry into the role of drug distributors in the opioid epidemic.
These numbers are outrageous, and we will get to the bottom of how this destruction was able to be unleashed across West Virginia, said committee Chairman Greg Walden, R-Ore., and ranking member Frank Pallone Jr., D-N.J., in a joint statement.
The panel recently sent letters to regional drug wholesalers Miami-Luken and H.D. Smith, asking why the companies increased painkiller shipments and didnt flag suspicious drug orders from pharmacies while overdose deaths were surging across West Virginia.
The letters outline high-volume shipments to pharmacies over consecutive days and huge spikes in pain pill numbers from year to year.
Between 2006 and 2016, drug wholesalers shipped 10.2 million hydrocodone pills and 10.6 million oxycodone pills to Tug Valley Pharmacy and Hurley Drug in Williamson, according to Drug Enforcement Administration data obtained by the House Committee.
Springboro, Ohio-based Miami-Luken sold 6.4 million hydrocodone and oxycodone pills to Tug Valley Pharmacy from 2008 to 2015, the company disclosed to the panel. Thats more than half of all painkillers shipped to the pharmacy those years. In a single year (2008 to 2009), Miami-Lukens shipments increased three-fold to the Mingo County town.
Miami-Luken also was a major supplier to the now-closed Save-Rite Pharmacy in the Mingo County town of Kermit, population 400.
The drug wholesaler shipped 5.7 million hydrocodone and oxycodone pills to Save-Rite and a branch pharmacy called Sav-Rite #2 between 2005 and 2011, according records Miami-Luken gave the committee. In 2008, the company provided 5,624 prescription pain pills for every man, woman and child in Kermit.
In its letters, the panel also raised questions about Miami-Lukens shipments to Westside Pharmacy in Oceana, Wyoming County. The committee cited documents that show a Miami-Luken employee reported a Virginia doctor, who operated a pain clinic located two hours from Oceana, was sending his patients to Westside Pharmacy, which filled the prescriptions.
In 2015, more than 40 percent of the oxycodone prescriptions filled by Westside Pharmacy in Oceana were coming from the Virginia doctor, according to the committees letter. The following year, the Virginia Board of Medicine suspended the doctors license, finding his practice posed a substantial danger to public health and safety.
The panels letter also mentions Miami-Lukens suspicious shipments to Colony Drug in Beckley. In a five-day span in 2015, the drug wholesaler shipped 16,800 oxycodone pills to the pharmacy.
In several instances, Colony Drug placed multiple orders for what appears to be excessive amounts of pills on consecutive days, the committee wrote.
The House committee questioned H.D. Smiths painkiller shipments to Family Discount Pharmacy in Logan County. The drug shipper distributed 3,000 hydrocodone tablets a day to the pharmacy in 2008, a 10-fold increase in sales from the previous year, according to the committees letter. The pharmacy, located in a town of 1,800 people, was shipped 1.1 million hydrocodone pills in 2008.
The House panel also cited Springfield, Illinois-based H.D. Smith for spikes in painkiller shipments to Sav-Rite, Westside Pharmacy, Tug Valley Pharmacy and Hurley Drug.
Oxycodone is sold under brand names like OxyContin, while hydrocodone brands include Vicodin and Lortab.
The committees bipartisan investigation continues to identify systemic issues with the inordinate number of opioids distributed to small town pharmacies, Walden and Pallone said in the statement. The volume appears to be far in excess of the number of opioids that a pharmacy in that local area would be expected to receive.
In a statement, H.D. Smith said it was reviewing the committees letter Monday.
H.D. Smith works with its upstream manufacturing and downstream pharmacy partners to guard the integrity of the supply chain, and to improve patient outcomes, the company said.
Miami-Luken did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
In February 2016, West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey ended a state lawsuit against Miami-Luken after the company agreed to pay $2.5 million to settle allegations that it flooded the state with painkillers. Morrisey, a former lobbyist for a trade group that represents Miami-Luken and other drug distributors, inherited the lawsuit in 2013 after ousting longtime Attorney General Darrell McGraw.
H.D. Smith paid the state $3.5 million to settle the same pill-dumping allegations in January 2017.
The committee gave H.D. Smith and Miami-Luken until Feb. 9 to turn over documents and answer dozens of questions about what steps, if any, the companies took to stop the flood of pain pills into Southern West Virginia.
We will continue to investigate these distributors shipments of large quantities of powerful opioids across West Virginia, including what seems to be a shocking lack of oversight over their distribution practices, Walden and Pallone said.
The state has the highest drug overdose death rate in the nation. More than 880 people fatally overdosed in West Virginia in 2016.
Lots of money in drug pushers.
More if it is “legal”
THEY MUST BE IN A LOTTA PAIN IN THAT TOWN....................
Plan is to kill off white people. Thats why nothing was done.
Maybe.
And Maybe it is because the right people are selling it
Those poor people in so much pain.
I saw this on the news when I was in Orlando over Christmas. There was a congress critter hearing on CSPAN. They were roasting the acting head of an agency involved, a black woman totally in over her head
I wonder who is paying for it. Taxpayers?
Grammy KC always told me. “Stay away from Pills”
More than two a day.
To get a feel for that area of the country, watch “The Wild and Wonderful Whites of West Virginia.”
I own that movie. It’s very telling about the US being a lot of different and diverse cultures. It’s like a third world country there.
The Free States of SW West Virginia. Folks gotta gotta get by you know. S/
Kinda remind me of all the Clintoon drug shipments into Mena, AR back in the day....
As then, so it is now: Follow the money trail and it will lead you to the evil.
Some drug dealers wear white coats.
I assume the town in now a ghost town, if the townees are taking them all. 8>)
It took them a whole decade to figure this out? Uh huh. The drug companies were getting their cut, too, with the sells.
A forensic audit of all senior West Virginia law enforcement officials would be most interesting...
definitely has that Mena/Clinton feel to it.
Weird Al’s next hit:
Sold oxycontin once or twice,
livin’ in a mountaineer’s paradise...
Book to read
Hillbilly Elegy
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hillbilly_Elegy
A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis is a memoir by J.D. Vance about the Appalachian values of his upbringing and their relation to the social problems of his hometown.
Thanks for the ping.
I grew up in WV. My parents still live in Huntington in the same house I grew up in.
The opiod crisis in WV is absolutely horrible. I saw it 1st hand when I was visiting last October. My parents tell me they see used needles in parking lots most every day. The economy in their area of WV has been on a steady decline since the 1970’s & the population has dropped from close to 100k folks to barely 40k just in Huntington alone.
What a nightmare!
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