U.S. health insurers and benefit plans alleged the consulting giant’s work for drug makers prompted them to pay for opioids instead of non-addictive and cheaper drugs

Consulting firm McKinsey & Company has agreed to pay $78 million to settle a lawsuit brought by health insurers and benefit plans over its involvement in the nation’s opioid addiction epidemic.

The proposed settlement was filed in a federal California court on Friday and resolved claims by the plaintiffs that McKinsey strategized and acted with opioid makers, including Purdue, to create and execute marketing and sales strategies to “maximize opioid revenue.”

The original lawsuit was filed by third-party payers such as private benefit plans, multi-employer pension plans and commercial insurers. They alleged these strategies harmed them by prompting them to pay for prescription opioids instead of safer, non-addictive and cheaper drugs, as well as the “addiction-related treatment that followed.”

McKinsey did not admit to any wrongdoing in the settlement. In a statement shared with The Messenger, the firm said “we continue to believe that our past work was lawful.”

  • that guy@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    The company should have all of its assets seized and be dismantled, the people who enabled it spending long sentences in prison

    • Bakkoda@sh.itjust.works
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      11 months ago

      It is. I got to bear witness to this groups sham business consulting at Mallinckrodt. They are a huge proponent of overly lean manufacturing calling it “agile” when in reality it’s just artificial scarcity by a really poor made to order business model. Lower overhead (people and wip/stock supply) and increase prices.

      They also make lots of money off this bullshit and should be barred from doing business in any FDA/DEA controlled environment.

      • Chapelgentry@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        Real talk here. My company used McKinsey in the utilities sector and they were paid millions to come in and lean out our processes. The result was that half of the consultants got moved to other projects, our internal processes got fucked with no clear improvement, and McKinsey walked away with millions. Their biggest contribution was death by PowerPoint.

    • Telodzrum@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      This is one settlement. The article says they’ve already paid almost $700 million to state Attorneys General.

    • jonne@infosec.pub
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      11 months ago

      He did ‘optimise’ the price of bread at a supermarket chain. Essentially calculating by how much to raise the price of an essential good before customers try to find alternatives.

  • alienanimals@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Executives should be put in prison for this shit. Instead they get a relatively small fee which is just a “cost of doing business” to them.

    • Endorkend@kbin.social
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      11 months ago

      Exactly.

      I’d be OK with CEOs and other management getting these overinflated wages and benefits if their role actually encompassed being responsible for EVERYTHING the company does under their watch.

      Now, they are only held responsible by shareholders for the finances of the company and everything else is just a cost calculation.

      They are fined 78 Million, which means they probably made billions of these actions.

      The fines should also be calculated as 100% of what they likely gained from their actions.

      Those two together would change how corporations and their management do things drastically.

      And I wouldn’t just make rules that define the CEO gets to go to jail, because then in the shortest time, they’d put flunkies in the CEO position, without any power, while the actual CEO gets another name label.

  • circuscritic@lemmy.ca
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    11 months ago

    “Former McKinsey consultant” are the last words you need to read on anyone’s bio. Here, I’ll give you an example

    Pete Buttigieg is the current Transportation Secretary and former McKinsey consultant… [STOP READING HERE]

    Doesn’t matter what comes next, you already know everything that’s actually relevant to who that person is.