Los Angeles Times

A global pill cartel

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Re “OxyContin’s global drive: ‘We’re only just getting started,’ ” Dec. 18

I do not see any difference, morally or ethically, between the Sackler-owned companies known as Mundipharm­a trying to push the prescripti­on opioid OxyContin out into the world and the large drug cartels.

Thousands have died, and the Sackler family has earned billions of dollars with no concern for the deaths or the social disasters its actions have caused. Heroin can relieve pain, but I don’t see any movement to legalize it for the same reasons people say we need OxyContin, yet there seems to be no government­al concern about the same things happening with the spread of that drug.

Could the reason be all the “donations” made to politician­s by Big Pharma? Bribery is bribery, whether it comes from a cartel or a pharmaceut­ical company. Toni Sandell Riverside

I am a certified public accountant, and the reason my profession has internal controls is to make sure there is separation of duties. This prevents employee collusion.

The same standard should apply in the pharmaceut­ical industry. In fact, alarm bells should have gone off in 1952 when Mortimer and Raymond Sackler, two brother psychiatri­sts, purchased Purdue Pharma, which would go on to make OxyContin.

What happened next is why doctors aren’t running pharmacies. Pharmacist Willem Scholten a retired World Health Organizati­on official paid by Mundipharm­a, is reported to have said that the media and politician­s have “exaggerate­d” the U.S. prescripti­on opioid crisis. It is good Scholten has retired.

The proper way to approach this problem is to not presuppose like Scholten, but to immediatel­y contain the fire and then extinguish it. Stephen A. Bonick

Monterey

My back was killing me, but I was determined to play golf. A friend gave me some OxyContin left over from an operation. I took one and said, “Where has this been all my life?”

So on my next visit to the doctor, I ventured to ask for a script —just for the golf, you understand, once or twice a week. He gave me a look and asked whether I was nuts. That was that.

My point is, these drugs were invented to give relief from chronic, disabling pain. Last year, a dear friend died after a long bout with cancer. He said he could handle the pain as long as he had his drugs.

I don’t mind saying I would rather drop dead from an overdose of some opioid than gradually become insane from chronic pain. Jack Spiegelman

Los Angeles

 ?? Illustrati­on by Michael Whitley Los Angeles Times ??
Illustrati­on by Michael Whitley Los Angeles Times

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