Stabroek News

Lessons from America’s Opioid Crisis

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President Trump’s decision to approach America’s opioid crisis as a “national health emergency” is a welcome departure, if only rhetorical­ly, from his country’s decades-long attitude to illegal drugs. Attention to the opioid epidemic is long overdue: between 1999 and 2015 more than 560,000 Americans died from drug overdoses, a number that increases by 175 on a typical day. Routine overuse of prescripti­on drugs has also become entrenched: 100 million Americans currently take medication for chronic pain, 27 million use illicit drugs regularly, according to the US Surgeon General. The recent toll of opioid prescripti­ons is now wellknown but research by the Centers for Disease Control shows that other pain prescripti­on related fatalities have also been rising. In 2011, nearly a third of deaths caused by overdoses of pain medication were attributed to benzodiaze­pines, legally available anti-anxiety drugs.

Trump denounced “dangerous criminal cartels [that] have been allowed to infiltrate and spread throughout our nation” but America’s opioid crisis is mostly homegrown. During the 1990s pharmaceut­ical companies aggressive­ly marketed the use of new drugs to ease chronic pain, even though they knew that they were, at best, a temporary solution that quickly stopped working and often left users addicted. The current crisis is due in large part to misleading claims by big pharmaceut­ical companies who propagated their wares with the full knowledge that many would end up on black markets or be shared with patients’ friends and associates, producing further addiction. Between 1996 and 2001 the DEA estimates that oxycodone-related deaths in the US quadrupled and OxyContin prescripti­ons grew twenty-fold – but the companies profiting from this epidemic were generally left alone.

America’s ineffectiv­e regulation of irresponsi­ble pharmaceut­ical companies has been all too predictabl­e. The few high-profile prosecutio­ns that have occurred have been too little, too late. In 2007, the parent company of the manufactur­ers of OxyContin was fined US$634m for deceptivel­y promoting “a highly abusable, addictive, and potentiall­y dangerous drug on an unsuspecti­ng and unknowing public,” according to the US attorney who prosecuted the case. Since then there have been no settlement­s of comparable magnitude. Meanwhile the overprescr­ibing continues – last year US doctors prescribed enough pills to fill a bottle for every adult in the country – and drug overdoses have become the leading cause of death for Americans under 50, with an annual toll greater than the lives lost in

the Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanista­n wars combined.

A 2016 report by the US Surgeon General contains several key insights into America’s evolving approach to drug addiction and suggests ways that the Caribbean might rethink its own antiquated attitudes and policies. Firstly, the report underscore­s the importance of treating addiction as a medical challenge rather a criminal or moral failing: “Addiction to alcohol or drugs is a chronic but treatable brain disease that requires medical interventi­on, not moral judgment.” Second, it notes that although there are several effective treatments there remains a significan­t “treatment gap” (only 10 percent of addicts seek treatment) largely due to the stigmatiza­tion of drug use within society – a lingering consequenc­e of the interminab­le “drugs war” launched by President Nixon in July 1971.

Moving away from a punitive criminal-justice approach to drugs will require a “cultural shift in the way we think about, talk about, look at, and act toward people with substance use disorders,” says the US Surgeon General, but this is achievable. The report notes that “Cancer and HIV used to be surrounded

by fear and judgment, now they are regarded by many as simply medical conditions.” Finally, the report emphasizes the “strong scientific as well as moral case for addressing substance use disorders with a public health model” and notes that since such an approach entails “reducing both health and social justice disparitie­s” it also strengthen­s the economic rationale for a new approach.

Drug addiction in the Caribbean differs significan­tly – for obvious economic, cultural and political reasons – from that in the United States, but that should not prevent us from absorbing their hardwon insights into the issue, and learning how to face our own problems with addiction with more intelligen­ce and compassion.

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