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Thursday, December 21, 2023

As states receive more than $50 billion in opioid settlement money, companies are competing to get some of the funding

Caution is advised with settlement money.
(Photo by JP Valery, Unsplash)
Money from opioid settlements began to hit state coffers in November, and now a long line of companies and service providers want to help states spend it. Experts are urging caution, reports Aneri Pattani KFF Health News. Marketing pitches for everything from funding new psychedelic research to providing law enforcement with lassos instead of tasers have been flooding state and local officials in charge of distributing the more than $50 billion in settlement funds.

The billions in payments were intended as a punishment and warning to drug companies whose aggressive, harmful and often dishonest marketing practices "fueled an epidemic that progressed to heroin and fentanyl and has killed more than half a million Americans," Pattani explains. "The settlement money, arriving over nearly two decades, is meant to remediate the effects of that corporate behavior."

But as the dollars began to flow to states in early November, "a swarm of private, public, nonprofit, and for-profit entities began eyeing the gold rush," Pattani writes. "Some people fear that corporations, in particular — with their flashy products, robust marketing budgets, and hunger for profits — will now gobble up the windfall meant to rectify it."

JK Costello, director of behavioral health consulting for the Steadman Group, a firm that is being paid to help local governments administer the settlements in Colorado, Kansas, Oregon and Virginia, "receives multiple emails a week from businesses and nonprofits seeking guidance on how to apply for the funds," Pattani adds. "To keep up with the influx, he has developed a standard response: 'Thanks, but we can't respond to individual requests, so here's a link to your locality's website, public meeting schedule, or application portal.'"

KFF Health News "obtained email records in eight states that show health departments, sheriffs' offices, and councils overseeing settlement funds are receiving a similar deluge of messages," Pattani reports. "In the emails, marketing specialists offer phone calls, informational presentations, and meetings with their companies. Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall recently sent a letter reminding local officials and vet organizations to reach out.

While some private sector companies will be partners, "the key, agree public health and policy experts, is to critically evaluate products or services to see if they are necessary, evidence-based, and sustainable — instead of flocking to companies with the best marketing," Pattani reports. "And, ultimately, failure to do due diligence could leave some jurisdictions holding an empty bag."

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