America is suffering from a pernicious and growing addiction to a category of drugs that include prescription pain medications and heroin. ADVERTISING America is suffering from a pernicious and growing addiction to a category of drugs that include prescription pain
America is suffering from a pernicious and growing addiction to a category of drugs that include prescription pain medications and heroin.
Opioid abuse and overdoses take a lethal toll across the country. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention puts the U.S. death count at 28,648 for 2014.
President Barack Obama’s welcome, if belated, response to this crisis would direct $460 million toward states to dramatically expand access to medication-assisted treatment for opioid abuse.
As the University of Washington’s Alcohol and Drug Abuse Institute noted in a 2015 online briefing, medication-assisted treatment “can be a lifesaving and cost-saving intervention for those with opioid use disorder.”
The remainder of the proposed budget authorization would go toward broad efforts to better train physicians on prescribing prescription pain medications and monitoring patients, tighten law enforcement on illegal sales and get an effective, lifesaving treatment for overdoses — naloxone — into the hands of first-responders.
Spending more to combat opioid abuse should be an easy call for lawmakers reaching for points of consensus. Addiction to prescription pain medications and heroin crosses urban and rural lines and partisan boundaries, and melds gender, age and income levels.
Treatment and care of those with opioid addictions is an evolving medical issue. No treatment of opioid use disorder is a panacea, as UW professor Caleb Banta-Green notes in a co-authored article in last month’s edition of Addiction, the journal of the Society for the Study of Addiction.
But there is scientific agreement on ways to treat opioid addiction with methadone and buprenorphine, cut mortality and reverse overdoses.
The growing number of Americans who need help makes it clear that failing to act is not an option. Spending money would save money in health care and law enforcement costs, and prevent physical, emotional and social trauma.
— The Seattle Times