Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel announced Tuesday that Michigan will receive a portion of a $678 million settlement with Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corp., resolving allegations that the company paid kickbacks to medical providers in the form of cash, meals, entertainment, and honoraria payments to induce them to prescribe various medications that treat hypertension or Type 2 diabetes.
The settlement includes 27 other states and the District of Columbia, with about $3 million of the total settlement amount resolving claims specifically related to Michigan’s Medicaid program.
From January 2002 and November 2011, Novartis allegedly paid kickbacks to doctors to prescribe Lotrel, Valturna, Starlix, Tekamlo, Diovan HCT, Tekturna HCT and Exforge HCT. Additionally, between January 2010 and November 2011, Novartis allegedly engaged in the same conduct related to its drugs Exforge, Diovan and Tekturna. Novartis systemically paid doctors to speak about certain drugs at sham events, with a veneer of education applied in an attempt to avoid the law, and covered the costs of lavish meals and entertainment for attendee doctors, to induce doctors to write prescriptions for these Novartis drugs in violation of Michigan’s Medicaid False Claim Act.
In a stipulation filed in federal court in connection to the settlement, Novartis admitted aspects of the scheme, including that it engaged in excessive meal and alcohol spending, minimal medical discussions at Novartis’s events and repeat attendance by doctors.
- Posted September 23, 2020
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Nessel joins $678M settlement to resolve kickback allegations
headlines Detroit
- Supreme Court to hear challenges of lengthy sentences for young offenders
- How big of a tent do Democrats really want? Michigan’s Senate primary is testing the limits
- Public, legal notices help protect citizens’ rights, property and finances
- A moon mission should give us all pause for damage done to our planet
- Daily Briefs
headlines National
- Judge grants stay in February 2025 California bar examinees’ case against ProctorU
- Blake Lively’s sexual harassment claims against Justin Baldoni face legal setback
- TikTok creator sued by immigration firm, accused of making defamatory comments online
- 15 attorney killings remain unsolved, Baja California Bar Association says
- ABA amicus brief supports law firms targeted by executive orders
- Legal services provider 8am and NFL’s Tampa Bay Buccaneers announce partnership




