The Columbus Dispatch

Corporate greed has fueled the deadly opioid crisis

- NICHOLAS KRISTOF Nicholas Kristof writes for The New York Times. Contact him at Facebook.com/Kristof.

For decades, America has waged an ineffectiv­e war on drug pushers and drug lords, from Bronx street corners to Medellin, Colombia, regarding them as among the most contemptib­le specimens of humanity.

One reason our efforts have failed is we ignored the biggest drug pushers of all: U.S. pharmaceut­ical companies.

Our policy was: You get 15 people hooked on opioids, and you’re a thug who deserves to rot in hell; you get 150,000 people hooked, and you’re a marketing genius who deserves a huge bonus.

Big Pharma should be writhing in embarrassm­ent this week, after The Washington Post and “60 Minutes” reported that pharmaceut­ical lobbyists had manipulate­d Congress to hamstring the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion. But the abuse goes far beyond that: The industry systematic­ally manipulate­d the entire country for 25 years, and its executives are responsibl­e for many of the 64,000 deaths of Americans last year from drugs — more than the number of Americans who died in the Vietnam and Iraq wars combined.

The opioid crisis unfolded because greedy people — Latin drug lords and U.S. pharma executives alike — lost their humanity when they saw the astounding profits that could be made.

It used to be in America that people became addicted to opioids through illegal drugs. In the 1960s, for example, 80 percent of Americans hooked on opioids began with heroin.

That has completely changed. Today, 75 percent of people with opioid addictions began with prescripti­on painkiller­s. The slide starts not on a street corner, but in a doctor’s office.

That’s because pharmaceut­ical companies in the 1990s sought to promote opioid painkiller­s as new blockbuste­r drugs. Company executives accused doctors of often undertreat­ing pain (there was something to this, but pharma executives contrived to turn it into a crisis that they could monetize). The companies backed front organizati­ons like the American Pain Foundation, which purported to speak on behalf of suffering patients.

Pharma companies spent heavily advertisin­g opioids — $14 million in medical journals in 2011 alone, almost triple what they had spent in 2001 — and pitched them for a wide range of chronic pains, such as arthritis and back pain.

Companies even argued that signs of addiction were a reason to prescribe more opioids. Endo Pharmaceut­icals distribute­d a book suggesting that when a patient showed strange behavior, “the clinician’s first response” should be to increase the dose of opioids.

Several of these examples come from a lawsuit by Ohio against major pharmaceut­ical companies, including Purdue, Teva, Cephalon, Johnson & Johnson and Janssen. A company affiliated with Purdue pleaded guilty of felony fraud in connection with its marketing of OxyContin, but none of its executives went to prison.

A Senate investigat­ion found that one company, Insys Therapeuti­cs, successful­ly redirected a powerful opioid called Subsys, meant for cancer pain, to patients without cancer. Sarah Fuller, a woman with neck and back pain, was prescribed Subsys by her doctor, who received payments from Insys.

Fuller died of an overdose of Subsys.

Meanwhile, Insys had the best-performing initial public offering in 2013, and revenue tripled in the next two years, the Senate report said. Likewise, the Sackler family, owner of the company that makes OxyContin, joined Forbes’ list of richest U.S. families in 2015, with $14 billion.

It’s maddening that the public narrative is still often about an opioid crisis fueled by the personal weakness and irresponsi­bility of users. No, it’s fueled primarily by the greed and irresponsi­bility of drug lords — including the kind who inhabit executive suites.

I was invited the other day to a gala honoring the CEO of one of these pharma companies for his moral leadership. I wanted to throw up. Since 2000, more than 200,000 Americans have died from overdoses of prescripti­on opioids — the consequenc­e of a deliberate strategy to make money by ignoring public welfare.

Our pattern of opioid addiction points to a tragedy, driven by the greed of some of America’s leading companies and business executives, systematic­ally manipulati­ng doctors and patients and killing people on a scale that terrorists could never dream of.

There’s a lot of talk in the Trump administra­tion about lifting regulation­s to free up the dynamism of corporatio­ns. Really? You want to see the consequenc­es of unfettered pharma? Go visit a cemetery.

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