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Don't blame addicts for America's opioid crisis. Here are the real culprits
Don't blame addicts for America's opioid crisis. Here are the real culprits
Of all the people Donald Trump could blame for the opioid epidemic, he
chose the victims. After his own commission on the opioid crisis issued
an interim report this week, Trump said young people should be told
drugs are “No good, really bad for you in every way.”
The president’s exhortation to follow Nancy Reagan’s miserably
inadequate advice and Just Say No to drugs is far from useful. The then
first lady made not a jot of difference to the crack epidemic in the
1980s. But Trump’s characterisation of the source of the opioid crisis
was more disturbing. “The best way to prevent drug addiction and
overdose is to prevent people from abusing drugs in the first place,” he
said.
That is straight out of the opioid manufacturers’ playbook. Facing a
raft of lawsuits and a threat to their profits, pharmaceutical companies
are pushing the line that the epidemic stems not from the wholesale
prescribing of powerful painkillers - essentially heroin in pill form -
but their misuse by some of those who then become addicted.
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