Abstract
Mortality rates for middle-aged whites in the U.S. are rising due to drugs, alcohol, and depression. Unique to our country, these “deaths of despair” disproportionately occur among the under-educated, who are at particular risk for dying young. At one time, less-educated persons aspired to work in the same factory as their parents, at union wages, with benefits. Those jobs, and the sense of community and prosperity and security they allowed, are evaporating. Many former workers suffer from chronic pain, which underlies America's ongoing opioid overdose epidemic. The pain is not only physical. It is psychic, spiritual, and economic.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Health Policy,General Medicine,Issues, ethics and legal aspects
Reference32 articles.
1. 9. Prescription Opioid Overdose Data, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, available at (last visited July 23, 2018).
2. 12. Id. at 6.
3. 15. Id.
4. 27. See Case and Deaton supra note 6, at 44.
5. 13. See supra note 9.
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2 articles.
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