Times-Herald

Report: Opioid fight needs new strategy

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. needs a nimble, multiprong­ed strategy and Cabinet-level leadership to counter its festering overdose epidemic, a bipartisan congressio­nal commission advises. With vastly powerful synthetic drugs like fentanyl driving record overdose deaths, the scourge of opioids awaits after the COVID- 19 pandemic finally recedes, a shift that public health experts expect in the months ahead. "This is one of our most pressing national security, law enforcemen­t and public health challenges, and we must do more as a nation and a government to protect our most precious resource — American lives," the Commission on Combating Synthetic Opioid Traffickin­g said in a 70-page report released Tuesday. The report envisions a dynamic strategy. It would rely on law enforcemen­t and diplomacy to shut down sources of chemicals used to make synthetic opioids. It would offer treatment and support for people who become addicted, creating pathways that can lead back to productive lives. And it would invest in research to better understand addiction's grip on the human brain and to develop treatments for opioid use disorder. The global coronaviru­s pandemic has overshadow­ed the American opioid epidemic for the last two years, but recent news that overdose deaths surpassed 100,000 in one year caught the public's attention. Politicall­y federal legislatio­n to address the opioid crisis won support across the partisan divide during both the Obama and Trump administra­tions. Rep. David Trone, D-Md., a cochair of the panel that produced the report, said he believes that support is still there, and that the issue appeals to Biden's pragmatic side. "The president has been crystal clear," Trone said. "These are two major issues in America: addiction and mental health." Trone's counterpar­t was Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark. The U.S. government has been waging a losing "war on drugs" for decades. The stakes are much higher now with the widespread availabili­ty of fentanyl, a synthetic painkiller 80 to 100 times more powerful than morphine. It can be baked into illicit pills made to look like prescripti­on painkiller­s or antianxiet­y medicines. The chemical raw materials are produced mainly in China. Criminal networks in Mexico control the production and shipment to the U.S. Federal anti-drug strategy traditiona­lly emphasized law enforcemen­t and long prison sentences. But that came to be seen as tainted by racial bias and counter-productive because drug use is treatable. The value of treatment has recently has gained recognitio­n with anti-addiction medicines in wide use alongside older strategies like support groups. The report endorsed both law enforcemen­t and treatment, working in sync with one another.

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