Zum Hauptinhalt springen
| Hans-Günter Meyer-Thompson | International

USA. The War on Recovery: How the U.S. is sabotaging its best tools to prevent deaths in the opioid epidemic

USA. The War on Recovery: How the U.S. is sabotaging its best tools to prevent deaths in the opioid epidemic

The opioid overdose epidemic has burned through the U.S. for nearly 30 years. Yet for all that time, the country has had tools that are highly effective at preventing overdose deaths: methadone and buprenorphine. 

These medicines are cheap and easy to distribute. People who take them use illicit drugs at far lower rates, and are at far lower risk of overdose or death. By beating back the cravings and agonizing withdrawal symptoms that result from trying to quit opioids “cold turkey,” methadone and buprenorphine can help people addicted to opioids escape an existence defined by drugs and achieve stable, healthy lives. 

But a yearlong investigation by STAT shows that virtually every sector of American society is obstructing the use of medications that could prevent tens of thousands of deaths each year. Increasingly, public health experts and even government officials cast the country’s singular failure to prevent overdose deaths not as an unavoidable tragedy but as a conscious choice. (Stat News, USA, 06.03.2024)

https://www.statnews.com/2024/03/05/opioid-addiction-treatment-methadone-buprenorphine-restrictions