Las Vegas Review-Journal

Open minds needed to treat addiction

-

currently available do not work for everyone, though, and we must make developing new and innovative approaches to treatment a top public health priority. Medication side effects, both physical and emotional, and the logistics of accessing treatment, can be significan­t barriers to patients as they desperatel­y try to rebuild their lives and find recovery.

Due to the stigma of this disease, we tend to write off patients who are struggling, dismissing their challenges as lack of motivation. In no other disease space do we do this: When a diabetes patient is experienci­ng challenges with insulin, or when a cardiac patient is having trouble with blood pressure medication, we readily provide alternate therapies.

We need more medication­s and better treatments for the disease of addiction. We don’t have enough medication options for alcohol use disorder, and 15 million people struggle with alcohol addiction. We don’t have a single medication for methamphet­amine use disorder, nor one for cocaine use disorder, though we’re seeing alarming increases in overdose deaths due to cocaine, particular­ly among black patients. Like any other disease, our patients deserve medical breakthrou­ghs, new medicines, advancemen­ts in science and research.

Each day, we lose 174 people to drug overdoses. That’s the equivalent of nearly three sold-out 747s every week, seven if we include alcohol-related deaths. These are our mothers, fathers, children, friends and neighbors, their lives cut short and lost to this disease. As a nation, we can no longer afford to continue to treat addiction like a moral failing, instead of like the medical condition science has proven it to be. We must take the lessons learned from the treatment of other chronic diseases and apply them to the disease of addiction, with the urgency this epidemic requires.

To accomplish this, the Addiction Policy Forum is proud to be raising awareness of the efforts of the Food and Drug Administra­tion and the National Institute on Drug Abuse as they work to develop patient-focused treatments for opioid use disorders. We must work with policymake­rs, white lab coats, patients and families on the frontline of this devastatin­g disease to better understand patients’ experience­s with available treatments, and to speed the developmen­t of new medication­s. Opportunit­ies like this one — fighting stigma with science and elevating the voices of the human beings directly affected by addiction — are why I have dedicated my life to this field. Together, we can solve this.

As a nation, we can no longer afford to continue to treat addiction like a moral failing, instead of like the medical condition science has proven it to be.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States