Description
Powerful at relieving pain, opioids undoubtedly help many people cope with illness or injury, yet they present a real risk for developing substance use disorders. In 2013, drug overdoses involving prescription pain medication killed 44 people on average every day in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The agency reports that enough prescription pain medication was prescribed in 2010 “to medicate every American adult around-the-clock for a month.” In addition, studies have shown that individuals with prescription drug use disorders can transition to heroin as their disease progresses, since heroin has similar effects.
This Forum event — in connection with a national poll by The Boston Globe and Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health — examined Americans’ attitudes about prescription pain medication misuse, as well as approaches to resolving this very serious national problem. The panel featured Michael Botticelli, Director of National Drug Control Policy at the White House; Monica Bharel, Commissioner of the Massachusetts Department of Public Health; and other experts who discussed the role of policymaking in addressing this crisis.
Presented May 18, 2015 in Collaboration with The Boston Globe.
Watch the entire series from The Forum at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health at www.ForumHSPH.org.
More than 100 million Americans struggle with chronic pain, according to one Institute of Medicine estimate, at an annual cost of as much as $635 billion in treatment and lost productivity. Further, the misuse of potent opioid painkillers, while increasing risk of addiction and abuse, can confuse...
Published 11/14/16
Health care has emerged as a hotly debated issue of the 2016 presidential election, with the Republican and Democratic presidential nominees expressing starkly different views on the Affordable Care Act (ACA). While approximately 20 million people have gained healthcare coverage since the law’s...
Published 11/04/16
According to the CDC, nearly 29 million U.S. women and 16 million U.S. men have experienced severe physical violence by an intimate partner at some point in their lifetime. Most of those experiences occur before the age of twenty-five. The evidence is clear that domestic violence takes a physical...
Published 10/25/16