Philippine Daily Inquirer

STUDY SAYS 26M PEOPLE DIE IN PAIN PER YEAR

- —AP

WASHINGTON— Nearly 26 million people around the world die each year with serious suffering in part because of a huge gap in pain relief—The US may be awash in opioid painkiller­s, but they’re rare or unavailabl­e in dozens of poor countries, said a new report.

The challenge is to improve palliative care in low-income countries while avoiding mistakes that led to the US addiction crisis.

The report to be published Friday in The Lancet says one key is using offpatent morphine that costs pennies a dose—not profitable for drug companies that push pricier, more powerful opioids in rich countries, but critical to easing a health emergency.

In some places, even children dying of cancer or children in treatment for cancer can’t get pain relief, said University of Miami professor Felicia Knaul. She cochaired a Lancet-appointed internatio­nal commission that spent three years studying the disparity and what she calls “the moral obligation” to help.

“This report finally gives voice to the suffering and a roadmap to government­s,” Knaul said.

Of the few hundred tons of morphine and equivalent opioids distribute­d worldwide, less than 4 percent goes to low- and middle-income countries, the researcher­s reported.

Some 2.5 million children are among the annual count of nearly 26 million who die without adequate relief, the team calculated.

Another 35.5 million people a year have serious pain and suffering from those conditions but aren’t dying, and most live in low- or middle- income countries.

The world’s poorest countries have access to enough morphine to meet less than 2 percent of their palliative care needs, the report found. India fares little better, at 4 percent; China meets 16 percent of its need, and Mexico 36 percent.

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