Abstract
Drug overdose has become the leading cause of death in the United States, and the majority of overdose fatalities involve opioids. Both legal (by doctor prescription) and illicit opioids are implicated in the current public health epidemic. The vast majority (80%) of heroin addicts started off using prescription opioids, showing that the healthcare and pharmaceutical industries are in large part culpable for fueling the crisis. Opioids do have a role to play in providing pain relief in extreme cases, but this powerful class of drugs needs to be pushed to the periphery of options available for patients in need of pain relief. Exploration of alternative options for pain relief is one of many strategies that can be used to address and mitigate the opioid epidemic. Other necessary interventions include the re-education of healthcare staff and the bringing to justice of the pharmaceutical industry.
Introduction
It is hard to believe that a pretty flower could be responsible for ruining so many lives, but in fact the opioid crisis can indirectly be traced to the story of the opium poppy. This magical plant provides one of the world’s most—in fact probably the most—effective pain reliever. The opium poppy has been used for therapeutic and recreational purposes for thousands of years, and has even led to major global wars like the Opium Wars. Since the advent of modern chemistry, scientists have been able to synthesize the compounds found in the opium plant and to develop other related compounds that can be used for pain relief. Those compounds are collectively referred to as opioids, to differentiate them from naturally derived opium. Opioids do, however, include the most notorious of all the opioids: heroin.
As many lives as heroin itself has destroyed, many more so have died from overdoses of other opioids. Unlike heroin, the opioids that are causing the recent epidemic are legal drugs. They are drugs that are prescribed each and every day by doctors around the country and around the world, without regard for the fact that opioids are narcotics. Narcotics are powerful drugs with tremendous benefits, for sure, but they are also among the most addictive substances on the planet. The story of heroin will seem a lot less sinister compared with the current opioid crisis, which involves deceit and hypocrisy. As more information surfaces about the ways pharmaceutical companies and doctors have liberally prescribed opioids, it is likely that major lawsuits and public policy initiatives will ensue along the lines of what happened with the tobacco industry. The current opioid crisis has been officially defined as a public health epidemic by major public health organizations like the National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Pharmaceutical companies and the healthcare system shoulder the majority of the burden for the current crisis; drug-related overdoses are now the leading cause of death in the United States. Responding to the opioid crisis requires a multifaceted approach, and may need to follow a similar trajectory as the one used to reduce the prevalence of smoking-related illnesses.
What Are Opioids?
Opioids refer to a class of drugs derived from the chemical compounds that were originally found in the opium poppy. Synthetic opioids include everything from illegal heroin to a slew of legal prescription medications. All opioids are effective for pain relief, although opiate compounds may be located in other prescription drugs like Immodium. Many compounds in opioids also happen to be endogenously manufactured by the human body, albeit in much lower quantities than would be consumed when taking prescription opioids (Case-Lo, 2017).
Some of the most commonly prescribed prescription opioids include codeine, Oxycodone, morphine, methadone, Vicodin (hydrocodone), fentanyl, and Demerol (Meperidine). Collectively, this class of drugs is also referred to as narcotics. Both heroin and fentanyl are frequently manufactured illegally, contributing to the opioid epidemic (CDC, 2019). Opioids are legal drugs, showing how the war on drugs is not at all effective for harm reduction. Because opioids are essential for treating severe short-term pain, they will remain legal. However, opioids cannot be used in situations in which the patient may experience chronic pain, or in situations in which the patient has a history or propensity for addiction. There are many other alternatives to opioids that can be used as part of a harm reduction strategy.
Causes of the Current Opioid Crisis
Addiction to opioids is far from a new phenomenon. Humans have consumed opioids in some form or another for millennia, but the ability to synthesize opioids has led to a proliferation of drugs in this category. Many, if not most, opioids do have some clinical benefits—most notably the alleviation of pain. The cause of the opioid crisis is not the drug itself—which remains necessary in many contexts. Rather, the cause of the current crisis can be traced to unethical practices in healthcare and pharmaceutical industry business practices.
According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (2019), pharmaceutical companies need to take responsibility for creating the current opioid crisis. Especially since the 1990s, pharmaceutical companies “reassured the medical community that patients would not become addicted to opioid pain relievers and healthcare providers began to prescribe them at greater rates,” (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2019, p. 1). Much in the same way that tobacco companies had knowingly lied about the dangers of tobacco use and abuse, the pharmaceutical companies have systematically avoided full disclosure about the potentially disastrous public health outcomes of the overuse of opioids. Physicians and other healthcare workers also need to shoulder some of the blame given that the addictive nature of opioids has been known for centuries.
Only recently has the culpability of major pharmaceutical companies surfaced. An Oklahoma judge ruled in 2019 that Johnson & Johnson “has blood on its hands for driving America’s opioid epidemic,” (McGreal, 2019, p. 1). Johnson & Johnson of course defers responsibility for the opioid crisis, casting blame wherever it could: including on “Mexicans, doctors, and inevitably, the victims themselves,” (McGreal, 2019, p. 1). Granted, physicians...…the discovery of non-addictive alternatives for pain relief.
Another necessary response to the opioid crisis is litigation. There have already been some success stories indicating that litigation may prevent the crisis from worsening or from recurring. For example, in 2007 Purdue Pharma pled guilty to criminal charges over how its brand of prescription opioid, OxyContin, was marketed (McGreal, 2019). According to the evidence presented in the case, OxyContin “played a major role in firing up the epidemic,” (McGreal, 2019, p. 1). While doctors should also be held accountable for their role in prescribing the drugs, there is some evidence that pharmaceutical industries pushed through public policy that “led hospitals and clinics to strong-arm doctors into prescribing narcotics,” (McGreal, 2019, p. 1). No one held a gun to the doctors’ heads, though. Blaming pharmaceutical company sales reps will not work because doctors are trained to know better; they are trained in medicine, not sales reps. Physicians have a legal and ethical responsibility to nonmaleficence—doing no harm. Doing no harm means refraining from haphazard and irresponsible prescribing of narcotics. Otherwise, the healthcare system is little more than a state-sanctioned drug dealer.
Finally, responding to the opioid crisis will also involve sensible harm reduction strategies put into effect immediately to reduce the number of overdose deaths. For example, naxolone and other overdose reversal options should be available over the counter. Naxolone could even be provided to anyone who is currently taking prescription or illicit opioids, so that friends or family members can use it to save the person’s life. The WHO (2018) recommends that any person who knows someone at risk for overdose have access to naxolone.
Conclusion
The opioid epidemic represents a failure in the American healthcare system. It is largely a preventable problem, though, and can be addressed using effective public policy. Framed in crude financial terms, the opioid crisis is unsustainable. It drains valuable resources—human and financial resources. The opioid epidemic is also a humanitarian crisis. Responding to this crisis will take time. It is not enough to ban opioids, which remain critical to pain relief. The most effective response to the opioid crisis will be to restructure the healthcare system to place greater legal responsibility upon pharmaceutical companies and healthcare institutions.
The first step in reducing the number of opioid-related deaths is to thoroughly raise awareness and improve knowledge about how to identify early warning signs of addiction, how to wean people off opioids via the use of proven interventions, and how to respond to an overdose in order to prevent death. The second step would be to thoroughly re-educate healthcare professionals. Physicians and others who are legally allowed to prescribe opioids need to take responsibility for their complicity in the crisis. Physicians and nurses need to work together to screen patients for risk factors related to propensity for addiction. Likewise, the healthcare team can decide when opioids are necessary and when alternative methods of pain relief would serve just fine.
References
Case-Lo, C. (2017). Withdrawing from opiates and opioids. Retrieved from:…
References
Case-Lo, C. (2017). Withdrawing from opiates and opioids. Retrieved from: https://www.healthline.com/health/opiate-withdrawal
CDC (2019). Understanding the epidemic. Retrieved from: https://www.cdc.gov/drugoverdose/epidemic/index.html
Human Resources and Services Administration (2019). Opioid crisis. Retrieved from: https://www.hrsa.gov/opioids
McGreal, C. (2019). Drug makers conspired to worsen the opioid crisis. They have blood on their hands. The Guardian. Retrieved from: https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/aug/29/opioids-crisis-drug-makers-pharma
National Institute on Drug Abuse (2019). Opioid overdose crisis. Retrieved from: https://www.drugabuse.gov/drugs-abuse/opioids/opioid-overdose-crisis
Saloner, B., McGinty, E.E., Beletsky, L., et al. (2018). A public health strategy for the opioid crisis. Public Health Reports 133(1): 24S-34S. doi: 10.1177/0033354918793627.
United States Department of Health and Human Services (2019). What is the U.S. Opioid epidemic? Retrieved from: https://www.hhs.gov/opioids/about-the-epidemic/index.html
United States National Library of Medicine (2019). Opiate and opioid withdrawal. Retrieved from: https://medlineplus.gov/ency/article/000949.htm
WHO (2018). Information sheet on opioid overdose. Retrieved from: https://www.who.int/substance_abuse/information-shee
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