Prevalent Misconceptions About Opioid Use Disorders in the United States Produce Failed Policy and Public Health Responses

Author:

Heimer Robert12,Hawk Kathryn3,Vermund Sten H14

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology of Microbial Diseases, Yale School of Public Health, and Departments of

2. Pharmacology, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut

3. Emergency Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut

4. Pediatrics, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut

Abstract

Abstract The current opioid crisis in the United States has emerged from higher demand for and prescribing of opioids as chronic pain medication, leading to massive diversion into illicit markets. A peculiar tragedy is that many health professionals prescribed opioids in a misguided response to legitimate concerns that pain was undertreated. The crisis grew not only from overprescribing, but also from other sources, including insufficient research into nonopioid pain management, ethical lapses in corporate marketing, historical stigmas directed against people who use drugs, and failures to deploy evidence-based therapies for opioid addiction and to comprehend the limitations of supply-side regulatory approaches. Restricting opioid prescribing perversely accelerated narco-trafficking of heroin and fentanyl with consequent increases in opioid overdose mortality As injection replaced oral consumption, outbreaks of hepatitis B and C virus and human immunodeficiency virus infections have resulted. This viewpoint explores the origins of the crisis and directions needed for effective mitigation.

Funder

National Institute of Mental Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical)

Reference69 articles.

1. Trump declares opioid crisis a ‘health emergency’ but requests no funds;Davis;New York Times,2017

2. Trump tweet: praises results of ‘take back day’ program;Griffee;DML News,2018

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