The Southland Times

Opioid epidemic blamed on corruption

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UNITED STATES: A cabal of congressme­n and drugs companies is alleged to have helped fuel an epidemic of opioid abuse in America by neutering efforts to stop suspicious shipments of painkiller­s reaching rogue doctors and chemists.

More than 64,000 overdose deaths were recorded last year in the US, a 22 per cent increase on 2015. An average of 175 people a day died from drug abuse, more than shootings and car crashes combined.

Yet even as the opioid crisis became a talking point in the race for the White House, Congress passed a bill last year that hindered the ability of the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion (DEA) to halt shipments of prescripti­on painkiller­s that its investigat­ors suspect are destined for the black market.

One of the champions of the bill was Tom Marino, a member of Congress who has been nominated by President Donald Trump to be the new White House ‘‘drugs tsar’’. Marino presented the new law as a means of safeguardi­ng access to essential medication.

Joe Rannazzisi, a former head of the DEA division that regulates and investigat­es the pharmaceut­ical industry, disagrees. He claims that the legislatio­n was the culminatio­n of years of effort to block the department from thwarting the flow of opioids to addicts.

The drugs industry spent more than US$100 million lobbying Capitol Hill between 2014 and 2016, and key members of Congress, including Marino, received sixfigure contributi­ons.

Rannazzisi, who retired in 2015, alleges that the money has bought unpreceden­ted influence and that companies have been able to bully the Justice Department, which oversees the DEA, into shelving investigat­ions into suspicious opioid supplies. ‘‘The drug industry, the manufactur­ers, wholesaler­s, distributo­rs and chain drug stores, have an influence over Congress that has never been seen before,’’ Rannazzisi told The Washington Post. ‘‘I mean, to get Congress to pass a bill to protect their interests in the height of an opioid epidemic just shows me how much influence they have.’’

Marino’s office did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Rannazzisi described to 60 Minutes, a TV news programme, how he decided while at the DEA to place less emphasis on prosecutin­g individual rogue clinics, pharmacist­s and doctors and to target big suppliers instead.

He alleges, however, that in 2011, Cardinal Health, America’s second largest drug distributo­r, put pressure on his superiors at the Justice Department. The former deputy attorney general James Cole has denied that pressure was put on his superiors.

- The Times

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