Quebec lawyers finding creative ways to reach potential opioid class-action members
MONTREAL — When Caroline Rivest broke her ankle a few years ago, a doctor prescribed her a powerful opioid for three months to help with the pain. She was hooked in no time.
After her prescription ran out, she turned to the black market to keep the withdrawal at bay.
“What struck me was that nobody had told me just how dangerous it was. Just how much it could change my life,” Rivest said Thursday afternoon at an opioid-support centre in Montreal called Méta d’Âme.
She was there filling out paperwork with Olivia Wawin, a lawyer involved in a class-action lawsuit against eight manufacturers and distributors of opioids that was given the green light to proceed by Quebec’s Superior Court in 2024. When the lawsuit was authorized, it targeted 16 companies, several of which settled, paying a total of about $22 million. Eight defendants remain.
