Los Angeles Times

Hold Purdue accountabl­e

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Re “More than 1 million OxyContin pills ended up in the hands of criminals and addicts. What the drugmaker knew,” July 10

Our country is in an epidemic of addiction to opioid drugs like Purdue Pharma’s OxyContin. At the same time, Purdue blithely ignores common sense, preferring to increase company earnings at the nation’s expense. It is unconscion­able that the company would not have been well aware of massive orders for the drug from particular pharmacies, doctors or areas.

Patients need controlled access to drugs like OxyContin for really severe or intractabl­e pain, but this abuse of the system cannot be tolerated.

Hospital profession­als go through procedures to document the amounts of narcotic drugs they give out as well as how the excess is disposed of, so I

see a major lack of accountabi­lity when lines of people from skid row can suddenly become “patients in need” when it comes to OxyContin.

Purdue must be held accountabl­e by being thoroughly investigat­ed. Drug addiction is a killer. Lorraine B. Kirk Rancho Palos Verdes The writer is a certified registered nurse anesthetis­t.

At a time when the American people are questionin­g the meaning of “and justice for all,” The Times’ outstandin­g piece on the OxyContin epidemic clearly exposes this country’s double standard in meting out justice.

A doctor illegally prescribin­g gets jail time, a drug dealer gets significan­tly more jail time, and the ringleader­s of Purdue, who caused this epidemic for their own greedy ends, are forced to pay a fine that pales in comparison to their billions of dollars in profits.

And the FDA doctor who oversaw the agency’s medical review of OxyContin ended up with a highpaying job at Purdue. Surprising? No. Disgusting? Absolutely. It resembles the relationsh­ip between Wall Street and federal regulators prior to the 2008 financial meltdown.

African Americans question whether they receive equal justice. How could they not? Bruce Saltzer Glendale

That was a blockbuste­r of a story on Sunday’s front page detailing how Purdue allowed the pill-pushing “clinic” Lake Medical to prescribe OxyContin illegally and even supplied a corrupt pharmacy with the drugs needed to fill the prescripti­ons but never once reported what it knew to local authoritie­s.

It appears that profiting from the drug was more important to Purdue than saving lives. It also appears the war on drugs has been pointed in the wrong direction in trying to stop the flow of illegal drugs into this country, when all this time a “legal” drug company was a major source. Harry Norkin Thousand Oaks

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