Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

TV PICK OF THE WEEK

- Dopesick BBC iPlayer, review by Yvette Huddleston

The opioid crisis in the US has been covered in various documentar­ies and recently also in the Netflix drama Pain Killer, as well as in movies such as last year’s Pain Hustlers starring Emily Blunt.

This eight-part drama series, first broadcast on Disney+ in 2021, focuses on the personal stories of the ordinary people whose lives were affected, destroyed and in many cases ended, by becoming addicted to OxyContin, a prescripti­on drug developed by Purdue Pharma which was aggressive­ly marketed as being non-addictive.

The series also explores the legal case that was painstakin­gly built by tenacious lawyers and investigat­ors over several years who noticed the alarming pattern of addiction – and death.

In the opening episode we meet dedicated small-town physician Dr Samuel Finnix (Michael Keaton) who is based out in the Appalachia­n mountain area tending to his patients who are mostly low-income, bluecollar workers, many of them working in physically demanding jobs, principall­y in the local coal mines. Injuries are commonplac­e and chronic pain is an issue. These are people who can’t afford to take time off work, so they need medication that works quickly and can keep pain at bay.

As it happens, they are exactly the kind of community that Purdue Pharma are targeting with their new drug.

The narrative structure moves back and forth in time – the ‘present’ is 2005, at a hearing in which Finnix is one of the witnesses, saying of his patients gravely: “I can’t believe how many of them are dead now” – and the storyline takes us back to the mid-1990s when the drug first appeared.

Finnix, like many clinicians, was initially reluctant to prescribe OxyContin due to the well-documented concerns around addiction and abuse in relation to opioids. Keen young sales representa­tive Billy Cutler (Will Poulter) is one of the team assembled by Purdue Pharma and its owners the Sackler family to persuade doctors of the drug’s efficacy and safety.

Sometimes difficult but compelling viewing that exposes the terrible human cost of unfettered greed.

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