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Chris McGreal is a reporter for the Guardian. A former correspondent in Johannesburg, Jerusalem, and Washington, DC, he now reports from across the United States. He is the recipient of the Martha Gellhorn Prize for Journalism.

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The Guardian October 27 2004 (2004) — Bidragsgivare — 1 exemplar

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"No one really knows how many have died from a drug overdose either caused by opioids or in combination with other drugs: the official count is 350,000 between 1999 and 2016."

350,000! 350,000! 350,000!

From the first page this book is a riveting account of the rise of the use and abuse of opioids from the pharmaceutical companies who mined the poorer segments of our country like West Virginia to the dubious fraudsters who built businesses shoveling prescriptions by the thousands. It is the story of the people who lost loved ones to overdoses and then the eventual comeback of heroin and fentanyl. This is a story of greed, corruption, intended and unintended consequences. Our families and communities have been laid waste.… (mer)
 
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auldhouse | 10 andra recensioner | Sep 30, 2021 |
If Americans had better health benefits such as paid sick leave, maybe they wouldn't need as many painkillers and opioids. Which might also be why the opioids epidemic is unique to the US.
McGreal's book is a perfect case study in the importance of C. Wright Mills's sociological imagination. Look for the intersection of social structure, history, power, and social location. This is what the book does. Because the epidemic is not a question of people with failing morals, defective hillbilly culture and other such nonsense. The book demonstrates that the structure of development, regulation, approval, distribution, prescription, and delivery of opioids is truly what was at the root of this, along with the powerful entities backing the spread of opioids for everything, pain as the 5th vital sign, and the data-less idea of an epidemic of pain. There is the power of Big Pharma, its sales reps and lobbyists, and their influence in Congress and government agencies, along with that of the medical profession. All of this goes beyond the unsavory characters the book also describes. And the selection of depressed areas such as poor counties in West Virginia, as the "target" for mass dumping of Oxycontin.
As I often tell my students, nothing ever happens by chance in society. An epidemic of addiction to opioids does not just happen. The book shows how it was constructed back in the 1990s, and has morphed over several decades with no clear end in sight.
… (mer)
 
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SocProf9740 | 10 andra recensioner | Jul 11, 2021 |
Wow. The story behind the prescription opioid epidemic. McGreal traces its origins to greedy drug companies, one in particular, and to drug distributors, who are required to report pharmacies that order unusual numbers of opioids.

It primarily began with OxyContin, which is a variation of Oxycodone. OxyContin ("contin" - "continuous") is a controlled release version of the popular oxycodone, meaning it contains megadoses, supposedly so that it lasts twelve hours. The formulation means it is in the system longer and can become addictive more quickly. Yet, on the strength of a letter and a weak study, the drug maker Purdue sold OxyContin as more effective and less addictive than other opioids. Evidence was weak but a few doctors, concerned that many people with chronic pain were not getting adequate pain relief, took to the talk circuits to support opioids in general. They believed they had gotten a bad name from a few abusers but had a legitimate purpose.

The story is actually astounding. Clinics with lines out the door. Pharmacies so busy they are tossing pill bottles to the counter. Obvious drug sales within feet of clinics and pharmacies. A major lack of medical oversight, and a lack of interest by the FDA. It is actually a small voice, followed much later by a big voice, in the CDC, that finally draws attention to the issue.

I admit that, as a person on the sidelines, I was upset when controls were put in place, preventing a friend with chronic pain from getting the amount of OxyContin that she was accustomed to getting. Her husband told me he was worried about her and glad controls were put in place, and I started to think more about it. It turns out that opioids are actually far from the ideal choice for chronic pain.

Much is not what we think. The drug industries' marketing campaigns are so good that they become part of our background beliefs. Sometimes we have to stop and question.

Excellent book, easy to read, with many examples of real people.
… (mer)
 
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slojudy | 10 andra recensioner | Sep 8, 2020 |

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Verk
2
Även av
1
Medlemmar
144
Popularitet
#143,281
Betyg
½ 4.4
Recensioner
11
ISBN
16

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