Walmart Sues Feds Over Prescribing Regulations

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

In an unusual move, Walmart has filed a lawsuit against the Department of Justice and Drug Enforcement Administration, asking a federal court to clarify the “roles and legal responsibilities of pharmacists and pharmacies” in filling opioid prescriptions.

“We are bringing this lawsuit because there is no federal law requiring pharmacists to interfere in the doctor-patient relationship to the degree DOJ is demanding, and in fact expert federal and state health agencies routinely say it is not allowed and potentially harmful to patients with legitimate medical needs,” the company said in a statement.

Walmart and other pharmacy chains are defendants in multiple class action lawsuits alleging the companies helped fuel the opioid crisis by dispensing opioids irresponsibly. They have also been fined tens of millions of dollars by the DEA for lax controls on opioid prescriptions. According to ProPublica, federal prosecutors in Texas even sought criminal charges against Walmart, but were overruled by top officials at the Department of Justice.

Walmart is the largest retailer in the world and operates over 5,000 in-store pharmacies in the United States. The company said it filed suit against the DOJ and DEA because it was caught “between a rock and a hard place” over opioid prescribing.    

“Unfortunately, certain DOJ officials have long seemed more focused on chasing headlines than fixing the crisis. They are now threatening a completely unjustified lawsuit against Walmart, claiming in hindsight pharmacists should have refused to fill otherwise valid opioid prescriptions that were written by the very doctors that the federal government still approves to write prescriptions,” Walmart said.

“At the same time that DOJ is threatening to sue Walmart for not going even further in second-guessing doctors, state health regulators are threatening Walmart and our pharmacists for going too far and interfering in the doctor-patient relationship. Doctors and patients also bring lawsuits when their opioid prescriptions are not filled.”

‘Corresponding Responsibility’

Under current law, pharmacists have a “corresponding responsibility” when filling prescriptions – a legal right to refuse to fill prescriptions they consider unusual or improper. Most pharmacists will call the prescribing doctor to double-check before turning away a patient, but Walmart and other pharmacies have gone even further by blacklisting doctors deemed to have questionable prescribing practices.  

That’s what happened to a nurse practitioner at an Arizona pain clinic, who received a letter from Walmart in 2018 saying it would no longer fill her prescriptions – even though there was no indication any of her patients had been harmed by opioids.

“In reviewing your controlled substance prescribing patterns and other factors, we have determined that we will no longer be able to continue filling your controlled substance prescriptions,” the letter states.

“It was very humiliating. I was upset about it,” said nurse practitioner Carolyn Eastin. “We’ve already had patients who can’t get prescriptions there.”

A former Walmart pharmacist told PNN the company closely monitors opioid prescriptions and the doctors who write them.

“They had assembled prescription numbers for every doctor who had filled prescriptions at my store. They knew the exact number of medications ordered and sold down to the tablet. They knew what drugs the doctors wrote for and what percentage of the total each drug they wrote for," the pharmacist explained.

In its statement, Walmart said its pharmacists “refused to fill hundreds of thousands of opioid prescriptions they thought could be problematic” and had “blocked thousands of questionable doctors from having their opioid prescriptions filled.” The company also said it frequently assisted law enforcement agencies in “bringing bad doctors to justice.”

Caught in the middle of this are pain patients with legitimate prescriptions that are not getting filled. In August, two patients filed class action complaints against Walgreens, Costco and CVS alleging they were discriminated against by the pharmacies.

As PNN has reported, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and other members of Congress are urging the DEA to update a regulation that would allow pharmacists to only partially fill an opioid prescription. Patients would have to return a second time to get the rest of their medication.