Nova Scotia

Nova Scotia joins national lawsuit against opioid manufacturers

Nova Scotia Health Minister Michelle Thompson introduced legislation Thursday to bring the Opioid Damages and Health-care Costs Recovery Act into line with similar acts in other provinces.

Health Minister Michelle Thompson said opioids were not marketed appropriately

Two plastic bottles of pills shown spilling contents out on a table, close up.
Nova Scotia is joining other provinces in a lawsuit against pharmaceutical companies that produce opioids. (Eric Baradat/AFP/Getty Images)

Nova Scotia is joining a national lawsuit against pharmaceutical companies that produce opioids.

Health Minister Michelle Thompson introduced legislation Thursday to bring the Opioid Damages and Health-care Costs Recovery Act into line with similar acts in other provinces.

British Columbia, which has been struggling for years with a major opioid epidemic, is leading the legal fight. A certification hearing is scheduled to begin at the end of next month in a B.C. court, in an effort to turn the lawsuit into a class action.

"We know that there are hundreds of Nova Scotians who are living with addictions, and the ways in which opioids were marketed, really, were not appropriate," Thompson said.

"As a result of that, harm was done. So do I have a number or figure? No. But I think many of us know that opioids have caused harm and death in our province and across Canada. And so that's why we're joining this suit."

According to Thompson's department, 63 Nova Scotians died from opioid overdoses last year.

Nova Scotia Health Minister Michelle Thompson is shown at a news conference in Halifax on Thursday, June 22, 2023.
Nova Scotia Health Minister Michelle Thompson is shown at a news conference in Halifax on Thursday, June 22, 2023. (Jean Laroche/CBC)

The province is distributing free naloxone kits to try to prevent fatal overdoses. So far, 32,365 kits have been distributed.

Agnes MacNeil, the Justice Department lawyer spearheading Nova Scotia's efforts in the legal fight, said it's too soon to say how much money Nova Scotia would be looking for, if the lawsuit is successful.

"There's a lot of cost estimates being prepared," MacNeil said outside the legislature.

"The largest provinces with the biggest problems are generally Ontario and B.C. are at the top. So they have done a lot of work in terms of estimating the cost related to the opioid epidemic and we're using that as a base to create estimates for the proportionally to the other provinces."

Last year, the lawsuit, which was filed in 2018, achieved a partial victory with a tentative settlement with Purdue Pharma, the maker of the addictive opioid OxyContin. However, the legal action continues against other drug-makers and distributors.

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Blair Rhodes

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Blair Rhodes has been a journalist for more than 40 years, the last 31 with CBC. His primary focus is on stories of crime and public safety. He can be reached at blair.rhodes@cbc.ca