The opioid crisis has dominated the public consciousness for several months. We all knew thousands and of lives and communities across the country had been devastated by opioid addition. However, The Guardian crystallized the matter for us:
Drug makers and distributors flooded the US with more than 75bn opioid pills in the crucial years when the country’s epidemic of painkiller addiction and deaths surged to record levels, according to previously secret data released by an American court.
The publication of the Drug Enforcement Administration statistics is a blow to some of the country’s biggest pharmaceutical firms that have paid hundreds of millions of dollars in out of court settlements in part to keep sealed evidence that they profiteered from escalating demand for opioids even as public health officials were declaring an epidemic.
The database covers 2006 to 2012 when opioid prescriptions reached a peak of 282m a year, enough to supply every American adult with a month’s worth of pills. By then, annual sales of narcotic painkillers had surged past $8bn.
More than 75 billion opioid pills would be enough to get every citizen in the U.S. addicted. The figure is astounding. Once the data was released it stoked the public’s outrage, and rightfully so. The question remains, “Who is responsible for the epidemic? Is it the drug manufacturers who developed the drugs or the distributors who flooded the market?
Today the DOJ and Purdue Pharma agreed to an $8 billion opioid settlement. The deal comes weeks before the election. Trump will undoubtedly take his victory lap, as he should. Read more:
[…] Trump Strikes $8 Billion Opioid Deal With Purdue Pharma […]
[…] October 2021 Trump’s DOJ and Purdue Pharma agreed to an $8 billion opioid settlement. The deal came weeks before the election. I thought the deal would create momentum for […]
[…] opioid epidemic. Understanding the art of the deal, In October 2021 Trump’s DOJ cut an $8 billion opioid settlement with Purdue Pharma weeks before the election. It created a pathway for a global opioid deal. This […]
[…] and you always knew where he stood on issues, good or bad. In October Trump struck an $8 billion opioid settlement with Purdue Pharma, which was designed to get monies into communities for treatment and prevention […]