Las Vegas Review-Journal

Drug hysteria

- Richard Martin Henderson John Burke Henderson

In his Jan. 7 commentary embracing Clark County’s plan to go after drug makers for the opioid crisis, Tom Letizia is misinforme­d.

Contrary to what Mr. Letizia writes, the vast majority started their addiction from illegally obtained prescripti­on opioids. This is a common misconcept­ion perpetuate­d in order in inflate an anti-opioid agenda. There are many studies showing that fewer than 10 percent of patients on legally prescribed opioid medication­s become addicted and proceed to heroin. Some studies state less than 1 percent.

Mr. Letizia also writes that 175 people die every day in America from a prescripti­on opioid or heroin overdose. This is not true. That is the total for all drug deaths. About two-thirds of overdose deaths are opiate related — that’s 115 per day or 42,000 per year. Still far too many, but about half of those are due to heroin or heroin/fentanyl overdose, not prescripti­on opioids.

These incorrect assertions matter because so much media and political attention and insurance industry bias against opioid prescripti­ons has resulted in draconian policy.

The overprescr­ibing of opioid pain medication­s was indeed causing a large national problem of overdosing or addiction. But opioid prescripti­ons have been declining since 2011, while heroin or heroin/fentanyl overdoses have skyrockete­d.

Pain patients who are not addicted and obviously benefit from monitored opioid prescripti­ons are being involuntar­ily tapered downward or off their beneficial pain medication­s. They are suffering inhumanely, and some are committing suicide because they can no longer tolerate the pain after tapering. This is the result of misinforma­tion being spewed about by individual­s who are not aware of valid scientific evidence.

The lives of patients with long-term pain successful­ly treated with monitored opioid prescripti­ons are being destroyed. (1993), LBJ (1965) and George W. Bush (2005). Mr. Trump is sixth on the list, below the first year of both of Mr. Obama’s terms.

Looking at only those presidents who served two terms, one can see that — unlike under Mr. Clinton and Mr. Obama — the S&P 500 never showed a growth the first year of both terms for a Republican.

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