Author: The Fix

  • My Family Is Obsessed with Legal Marijuana

    My Family Is Obsessed with Legal Marijuana

    Mason jars of homegrown flower, plans for a “bud and breakfast,” and a pipe named Zelda: How one family holiday opened my eyes to just how rapidly the cannabis-ation of America is rolling out.

    In my long-sober view, the new normal now wafting across my extended family from legal and soon-to-be legal weed states is nothing short of surreal.

    The U.S. is in the midst of a profound social shift. According to an October 2018 Gallup poll, 66% of Americans now support legalization of marijuana, up from 44% in 2009 (and 14% in 1969!). One in three Americans currently live in a state where pot is completely legit for adults, and with New York and New Jersey poised to join the legalization bandwagon, that number is likely to drop to one in two. National legalization is one of the more mundane talking points among the 2020 Presidential candidates, and the U.S. House of Representatives recently took a break from pondering impeachment to pass the SAFE Banking Act to ease restrictions on financing of marijuana-related ventures. The recent vaping scare notwithstanding, cannabis has gone from taboo to mainstream in the generational blink of an eye.

    Are We Rolling Into Post-Prohibition with a Clear Head?

    It’s that generational aspect of this marijuana moment in America that is most intriguing to me. As I celebrate more than 30 years of a sobriety that very much includes abstinence from pot, it seems that every other Baby Boomer I know — from my 65-year-old Alaska-homesteading sister to high school classmates moving gleefully into Parrothead-themed retirement communities — is reliving their doobie-driven youth with medical or recreational pot. Meanwhile, my Generation Z nephew tells me that he and his college friends consider marijuana as indispensable as their iPhones.

    Everyone I’m related to seems to be smoking, dabbing, growing, marketing, or otherwise celebrating cannabis. As I anticipate another family Thanksgiving turning into Weedsgiving, I have to wonder: Are we rolling into post-prohibition with a clear head?

    It’s not like we’re strangers to the dangers of substances in my family. It all goes back to the patriarch, our charming drunken newspaperman of a dad, a man who always had a pint and a half-written novel in his top desk drawer. By the time he died in the mid-1980s, he couldn’t write, or walk, or remember more than 30 minutes at a time. Alcohol had taken it all away.

    That was about when I got sober, having followed far enough in dad’s footsteps to know I had to stop. Our mom quit her Gallo Vin Rose and Marlboros not long after, and my sisters dialed their partying back to near zero as well. Our younger brother? He was always the straight one anyway, his only apparent vice a cigar once a year, smoked in his California backyard to avoid bothering anyone.

    Fast forward to 2017. We’re standing in that same backyard a year after voters across the Golden State approved Proposition 64, the Adult Use of Marijuana Act, and 20 years after California pioneered medical marijuana. I’ve come to Bakersfield for my niece’s pop-up wedding shower, but I’m the one who gets a surprise: my clean-living little brother, his ever-sensible wife, and our earthy-sane older sister all sharing a joint amid the streamers and hydrangeas. 

    Is It Purely Medicinal If You Also Get High?

    “It helps unkink my back just like it does Nancy’s,” my sister Adrian says, nodding toward our sister-in-law, “though at home I prefer my pipe.” Since Alaska legalized in 2015, she says, her little town of Haines is considering a future as a marijuana tourist destination.

    Brother Matt exhales and scratches his beard. “Honestly, it just helps me concentrate when I’m working on software, and then lets me ease up after.”

    What a bunch of potheads! I think, but don’t say. Instead I nod and listen and try to parse the difference between the toke you take for an ache and the pill you might pop for the same, or the puff that relaxes versus the bourbon that unwinds. Is it purely medicinal if you also get high? Is that pipe ritual upon waking the equivalent of a morning espresso — or a morning vodka? 

    I wonder what our parents, gone now more than 7 and 30 years respectively, might say about this latest chapter in the family history. Mom might chuckle at the sight of adults indulging in what she’d always known as a dumb kid pursuit, the province of the runaways she counseled at the shelter where she was lead social worker all those years. Dad might raise a glass of port — his drink of choice near the end — to anything that eases the pain that living sometimes brings. “And you say it’s legal now?” they would both ask, looking around anxiously. “Marijuana, legal. Imagine that.”

    A little over a year later, in the fall of 2018, we gather all the generations together for a once-a-decade family reunion at our sister Melody’s Airbnb in the Berkshire Mountains. Massachusetts has just legalized recreational marijuana, and Melody’s turned her green thumb to the task of growing. 

    Family Revelations

    Melody got sober the same time I did, and doesn’t herself partake. But the bounty of her harvest has the extended family abuzz. In pairs and trios, our siblings and spouses and offspring step out onto the smoking porch. Niece Kelly huddles with Melody to craft a listing for the inn as the Berkshires’ newest “bud and breakfast,” complete with a crystal bubbler pipe in each room. 

    Matt tells us what his wife and daughters have known since the early 1990s: that he smokes daily but didn’t want his sober sisters to find out; he’s now relieved to be out of the cannabis closet. When Melody hands out jars of bud for folks to take home as a souvenir of the weekend, our formerly militantly straight-edge nephew sheepishly claims one. “My friends got me a pipe for my 21st birthday,” he says. “I named it Zelda.”

    “Fitzgerald?” I ask, shaking my head at the enduring appeal of addiction and madness.

    “No, from Nintendo,” my nephew giggles. In his tween years, he spent hours composing electronic music for video games, and now I imagine him doing the same with Zelda and his Massachusetts weed, which he tells me “all of New York knows is the best.”

    On the way back to the city, I’ve designated myself the driver. Everyone else in the rental minivan is in various states of sleep or stupor, except for Adrian, who gets a little speedy after the third bowl of the day. She’s telling a story about the elders she works with back home, how gummies are getting this one off of painkillers and CBD ointment turns out to be just the thing for that one’s bad knee. 

    Half-listening, I have a vision of the senior center of the not-so-distant future. Old people who are my age now, swaying in their wheelchairs and walkers while aides pass among them, dispensing wafers and puffs of vape. A visiting DJ plays “Sugar Magnolia,” some Marley and a touch of Wu Tang. Staffers smoking up on their break outside create a welcoming cloud for the teenager who walks in with a water pipe wrapped in cellophane and ribbons for grandpop. A visiting daughter rubs sweet-skunky oil into her mom’s hands, fingers entwining. The world beyond is raging, but everything here is chill.

    I get a chill.

    Coming Home

    I drop off the rental car and head straight to an AA meeting. I’ve never been happier to raise my hand.

    “I’m Mickey, I’m an alcoholic, and I’m celebrating 33 years clean and sober.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • "Drugstore Cowboy" Turns 30: Revisiting The Classic Addiction Film

    "Drugstore Cowboy" Turns 30: Revisiting The Classic Addiction Film

    The classic film offers viewers a glimpse into the world of addiction without cheap clichés and stereotypes.

    Drugstore Cowboy, the acclaimed film directed by Gus Van Sant, has just hit its 30-year anniversary. Three decades after its release, The Guardian makes the case that it could possibly be the best movie made about addiction.

    Based On A True Story

    Cowboy was based on the memoir by James Fogle.

    As Van Sant told Indie Wire, “Fogle had spent most of his time in prison growing up. He had written a few different novels. This was one of them. This material was written in the ‘60s and it always had a very pulp-fiction feeling…”

    Cowboy follows Matt Dillon and his cohort of drug-using pals, played by James LeGros, Kelly Lynch and Heather Graham, as they rob drugstores along the Pacific Northwest. The film really captures the many nuances and subtleties of active addiction, writes the Guardian‘s Scott Tobias.

    All You Gotta Do Is Look At The Labels

    In the film, Dillon says, “Most people don’t know how they’re going to feel from one minute to the next. But a dope fiend has a pretty good idea. All you gotta do is look at the labels on the little bottles.”

    As Tobias writes, “Drugstore Cowboy could be a companion piece to Midnight Cowboy from 20 years earlier, in that both are about modern outlaws living hand-to-mouth in urban squalor, running short-term scams into long-term trouble. Only Van Sant’s film has a funny, offbeat, episodic quality that doesn’t negate the heartbreak and tragedy that’s peppered throughout it, but gives it dimension and surprising verve.”

    Another critic called Cowboy “a breakthrough portrait of addiction… The film is casually idiosyncratic, shifting from absurdist comedy to downbeat drama, and back again. It’s a fitting style for characters whose lives veer from ecstasy to dread, depending on whether the next fix is in hand.”

    At the height of anti-drug hysteria in the ’80s, Cowboy was also a refreshingly non-judgmental movie that showed addiction without the use of cheap clichés and stereotypes.

    An Anti-Drug Film

    In a behind-the-scenes documentary on Cowboy, Van Sant said, “I think it’s an anti-drug film, yeah. It’s not a pro-drug film. It’s a story about a group of people that are addicted very heavily to drugs and something that happens to them.”

    The film’s producer, Cary Brokaw, added, “It allows the audience to see the attraction of drugs, and to understand intimately what that lifestyle, that high, that surge, that charge means. But it also allows the audience to see the consequences firsthand and to see the destruction and the loss.”

    Fogle would die in prison in 2012 while serving a 16-year sentence for robbing a pharmacy. He was 75.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • World's First Marijuana Breathalyzer To Hit Market In 2020

    World's First Marijuana Breathalyzer To Hit Market In 2020

    The device can distinguish between recent use of marijuana and residual THC, which lingers in the body for about 30 days after use.

    The world’s first marijuana breathalyzer—said to be able to detect recent use rather than the mere presence of residual THC in the system—will hit the market in 2020.

    Northern California-based Hound Labs, which received a funding boost to expedite the device’s release, says their device can distinguish between recent use of marijuana (which implies intoxication) and residual THC, which lingers in the body for about 30 days after use.

    A Very Important Distinction

    The Hound device’s ability to make this distinction is the key. The lack of a device able to weed out high motorists was a major issue for some law enforcement officials across the country and a key reason cited for opposing marijuana legalization.

    “DUI under marijuana is a huge, huge problem. It’s one of the reasons we’ve been against legalization,” said John Adams, district attorney of Berks County in Pennsylvania. “I’ve heard about the breathalyzers. If the technology is out there, it would be a great tool. It would alleviate some of our fears.”

    The Hound device is portable and can detect both alcohol and marijuana. The device is comprised of a base station and a hand-held device that, together, retails for about $5,000, according to the Providence Journal.

    Mike Lynn, a veteran emergency department physician and reserve deputy sheriff from Oakland, California, collaborated with scientists at the University of California at Berkeley and San Francisco to create the device.

    “We wanted to be able to detect THC in people who have recently used it—either eaten the stuff or smoked a joint,” said Lynn. “Those are the people we want to discourage before they go to the workplace or get behind the wheel.”

    Currently, medical marijuana is legal in 33 states and Washington, D.C. Recreational marijuana is legal in 11 states and D.C.

    “If Someone Is Not Stoned, They Shouldn’t Be Arrested.”

    Lynn emphasized the importance of distinguishing between people who are driving while high and people who are driving sober but may still use marijuana off the road.

    “It’s about creating a balance of public safety and fairness. I’ve seen the tragedies resulting from impaired driving up close,” said Lynn. “And I have a good idea how challenging it is at the roadside to know whether someone smoked pot recently. But I believe if someone is not stoned, they shouldn’t be arrested.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Orange County Sheriffs Seize 18 Pounds Of Fentanyl In Single Bust

    Orange County Sheriffs Seize 18 Pounds Of Fentanyl In Single Bust

    More than 100 pounds of fentanyl have been seized in the OC this year. 

    Sheriffs’ deputies in Orange County, California reported the seizure of 18 pounds of fentanyl, amounting to nearly half of the total amount of fentanyl that OC authorities seized in 2018.

    The bust, which had a reported street value of $1.25 million, was reported by media sources to be enough fentanyl to create “four million lethal doses.”

    Fentanyl-Related Deaths In Orange County Surge

    Though a win for law enforcement, the seizure also underscored the threat posed by fentanyl to Orange County, which has seen a substantial increase in the number of overdose deaths related to the potent synthetic opioid over the last five years.

    According to the Orange County Register, investigators confiscated the fentanyl on October 16, as well as a loaded semi-automatic handgun, five pounds of heroin, a half-pound of methamphetamine, and $71,000 in cash.

    Sheriffs’ deputies also arrested Rudolph Garcia, 60, who was booked on suspicion of possessing fentanyl, heroin and methamphetamine, as well as being a felon in possession of a firearm. He was held on $2 million bail.

    OC Sheriffs Have Seized More Than 100 Pounds Of Fentanyl In 2019

    Los Angeles CBS affiliate KCBS quoted the Orange Country sheriff’s department’s figures regarding fentanyl seizures over the last four years, which have risen from less than a pound in 2016 to 44 pounds in 2018. The October 16 bust raised the total amount seized in 2019 to more than 100 pounds.

    “[The October 16 seizure] was enough fentanyl in one seizure to kill the entire county’s 3.2 million residents three times over,” said Orange County Sheriff Don Barnes. “It’s very dangerous [and] it’s not getting better. It’s getting worse. And I think as a county, as a state and as a country, we have to get out ahead of this.”

    Fentanyl-related overdose deaths have risen sharply in the state of California over the last half-decade, and Orange County is no exception. In March 2019, the Orange County Register quoted the county coroner’s report from 2018, which found that the number of fentanyl-related deaths increased 164% between 2014 and 2016 before jumping another 54% between 2016 and 2017 alone.

    And according to a Facebook post from the Orange County Sheriff’s Department, those numbers skyrocketed between 2017 and 2018, which saw a 149% increase in fentanyl overdose deaths.

    The social media post also noted that the Orange County Crime Lab reported a 101% increase in the presence of fentanyl in various drugs confiscated throughout the county, with 225 drugs found to contain fentanyl in June 2019—again, a staggering increase of 91% from statistics reported in June 2018.

    “The threat this extremely potent drug poses to our community is increasing exponentially, not subsiding,” said Barnes in a statement.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • How Capitalism’s “Evil Twin” Fuels Addictive Behavior

    How Capitalism’s “Evil Twin” Fuels Addictive Behavior

    A drug history expert discussed a type of predatory capitalism that’s exploitative and highly profitable.  

    A fascinating interview with historian David T. Courtwright explores how capitalism has fueled addictive behaviors—the result of industries exploiting humans’ dopamine response, the desire to feel pleasure, for profit.

    Exploitation Is Rewarded With Easy Money

    Courtwright, a drug history expert, discussed his book, The Age of Addiction: How Bad Habits Became Big Business, with Vox in a recent interview.

    “I’m not anti-capitalism, but I am calling attention to a certain species of capitalism that cultivates addictive behavior for profit,” said Courtwright.

    Courtwright calls it “limbic capitalism,” a version of capitalism in which exploitation—rather than a desire to drive progress—is rewarded with easy money. As Courtwright says, it is “capitalism’s evil twin, a really cancerous outgrowth of productive capitalism.”

    He says, “Limbic capitalism is just my shorthand for global industries that basically encourage excessive consumption and even addiction.”

    Hijacking The System

    The term is in reference to the limbic region of the brain, where pleasure, motivation, memory and more are regulated. Corporate interests have been able to “hijack” the limbic system by promoting products—such as cigarettes and junk food—that work “against your long-term survival prospects,” Courtwright says.

    Yes, this type of predatory capitalism has existed for some time.

    “People have always peddled products that are potentially addictive,” Courtwright acknowledged. “But what’s happened in the last 100 years or so is that more of these commercial strategies come from highly organized corporations that do very sophisticated research and find more ways to market these addictive goods and services.”

    A prime example is smartphones, social media and mobile apps. “You’re not just responding to these devices, you’re anticipating them,” said Courtwright.

    These represent the modern age of limbic capitalism. Previously, it had been alcohol, tobacco and other drugs. Now, there’s a greater spectrum of products and services designed to entice.

    “So now we don’t just speak about addiction to drugs, we speak about addiction to pornography, to computer games, to social media, to food, to all kinds of things,” said Courtwright.

    Preying On Your Desires

    There’s at least one reason to be optimistic, though. History has shown us that even Big Tobacco couldn’t overcome public health activists when cigarettes were once a fixture of hospitals, classrooms, and even airplanes. But as Courtwright says, resisting the temptation to succumb to destructive habits advertised to us on a day-to-day basis is still “an uphill battle.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Ivan Moody Reflects On Addiction Through His Tattoos

    Ivan Moody Reflects On Addiction Through His Tattoos

    The Five Finger Death Punch singer got candid about the connections between his tattoos and his journey to sobriety.  

    Ivan Moody, the lead singer of Five Finger Death Punch, has had a very tough road out of addiction, and recently he spoke to the metal site Loudwire for a show called “The Needle and The Damage Done.”

    It’s a show about tattoos, but the title, in reference to a Neil Young song about heroin, is also fitting considering his dark past.

    In showing his tattoos, Moody has a phoenix drawn onto his head which represents his one-year sobriety milestone.

    “I wanted to not only wake up everyday and remind myself of how far I’ve come, but how far I have to go,” he says. “I wanted to make sure that everybody knew that I wasn’t going anywhere. This is not only a symbol of my strength, but also, hopefully, a symbol that other people can look at, and know they’re not alone.”

    Declared Legally Dead For 2 Minutes

    Moody also has a snake tattoo, symbolizing shedding skin after coming out of a medically induced coma, During his coma, Moody was declared legally dead for two minutes, and when he woke up, he needed help walking to the mirror. He took a hard glance and didn’t recognize the person staring back at him.

    “It was like [Lord of the Rings character] Gollum. I was green and ugly and pale and like, ‘What the fuck happened to me?’ And that’s when I decided I was going to shed skin and be the man that I’ve always been and I can be.”

    Moody adds, “The biggest part for me, especially in sobriety, yes it’s the band, yes it was for my kids, yes it’s for my family, but at the beginning of the day, it starts with me.”

    Under his eye, Moody has the spears of destiny symbol, which is out of the Bible, and he also turned a teardrop tattoo into a flame, “as a sign of the future. I wanted to do everything I could to not forget who I am, but move past it.”

    This past March, Moody hit his one-year sober milestone, and as he said in an Instagram video, “I’m speechless man. A lot of people didn’t think I’d make it 24 hours. To be honest with you, there were times I didn’t either.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Overdose Deaths: Not an Epidemic or a Crisis, and Not by Accident

    Overdose Deaths: Not an Epidemic or a Crisis, and Not by Accident

    Overdoses are not mysterious, they result from predictable causes like criminalizing drug use, ineffective policies, poverty, lack of stable housing, and persistent racism.

    Opioid-related overdoses are not a crisis or an epidemic, and should not be described as either. Both words stigmatize the victims of a phenomenon that is not happening by accident. Such overdoses have been steadily increasing throughout the United States and are especially high in Appalachia (where we both work). Yet overdoses are not a natural or mysterious phenomenon. They result primarily not from individual, but from larger structural factors — criminalization of drug use, ineffective social policies, poverty, lack of stable housing, historical and persistent racism, and other forms of systemic oppression — which are all the result of deliberate policy decisions.

    We are told by the media, CDC, and state governments that the region where we live and work is ground zero for a drug “crisis.” Yet those same entities contribute to the problem through policies, funding allocations, and covering-up of underlying systemic causes. We must shift our language to reflect this. Substance use and overdose happen in predictable contexts and disproportionately affect marginalized communities.

    Terms Like “Epidemic” and “Crisis” Cause Alarm and Hysteria, Stigmatizing People Who Deserve Compassion

    More than 67,000 people in the United States died from opioid-related overdose in 2018. Alarmist headlines, even well-intended reports, do not justify an inaccurate framing. We advocate instead for the use of the term impact, or other language that indicates the underlying roots of suffering, instead of epidemic or crisis.

    Epidemic is most accurately used to describe infectious or viral spread of a disease within a population over a short period of time. Substance use, even for the relatively low 18% of people who use “chaotically,” does not meet this criteria. People who overdose or suffer negative consequences of substance use may be more socially or genetically vulnerable to a substance use disorder but in basic epidemiological principles, that does not an epidemic make. Calling structural violence that leads to specific overdose patterns an epidemic or a crisis feeds into a hysteria that marginalizes drug users and their loved ones. Both words take the focus away from the underlying causes of suffering; naturalizing it and leaving the conversation at a surface level without motivating real change. 

    We both work in and study harm reduction and overdose prevention in North Carolina: a microcosm of opioid-related deaths and specific patterns of suffering repeated elsewhere in Appalachia and throughout the country. Daily, we observe the dynamics of economic policies, limited healthcare access, and stigmatization that impact people already at greater risk for substance use and overdose. Later in this essay we discuss how it plays out in North Carolinians’ overdose risks — making it more likely they and their loved ones will be blamed if they do.

    How Misguided Drug Policies Blame the Victims While Ignoring the Causes

    Like the thousands of lives lost to fentanyl poisoning in the context of increased drug use criminalization today, there was nothing natural about the thousands of lives lost to alcohol poisoning during prohibition a century ago; or the increase in deaths and drug-related arrests that ravaged inner-cities during the government-manufactured “crack era” of the 80s and 90s. Consequences of drug use, like mass incarceration, have never been a natural disaster. Instead, policy responses to drug use tend to create systemic storms that rage in vulnerable communities. This is a classic example of blaming the victims of problems while ignoring the causes.

    If a “crisis” is happening to those around you, you may feel bad for them, you may vote for a politician who promises to address it — but you probably won’t ask how the same politicians or political system contributed to creating it, or how arresting and jailing poor and Black and Brown people will fail to fix it. Overdose deaths in the U.S. have always been both a symptom and outcome of discriminatory policies

    Suffering is further exacerbated by punitive policies such as drug-induced homicide laws that increase overdose deaths, weaken Good Samaritan legislation intended to reduce overdose, and criminalize drug users and their loved ones. For example, opioid de-prescribing mandates in 19 states appear to result in an increase in heroin overdose deaths. And, healthcare policy is an oft-overlooked aspect of overdose prevention — states that did not expand Medicaid (which increases coverage of treatment) are disproportionately states with higher overdose and substance use.

    Mainstream media portrays sympathetic stories of the middle-class sons and daughters of urban politicians dying of overdose, while the stigmatized partners and friends of poor Appalachians who disproportionately die of overdose from drugs often laced with fentanyl fear being arrested under ‘drug-induced homicide’ and ‘death by distribution’ laws if they call 911. The ways that drug users are talked about serve political agendas that further contribute to patterns of suffering.*

    We must acknowledge and address what is missing, obscured, and ignored when we promote an inaccurate framing of drug use as a “crisis” or “epidemic,” rather than something caused by policy decisions. Who is disproportionately blamed? Who is left out of the conversation? 

    When we fail to address how a combination of economic, political, biological, behavioral, genetic, and social factors intersect within the lives of drug users and their wider communities, we legitimize the use of simplistic and punitive approaches to complex issues. Where we live and work, North Carolina policy makers used the 2016-2017 increase in drug overdose deaths to justify an argument for harsher punishments despite a wealth of research that shows that such approaches increase the very health consequences they claim to reduce. Further, these approaches do nothing to address economic disparities in North Carolina where 13 of 100 counties have experienced rates of poverty at 20% or higher for the last three decades. They do nothing to address the lack of Medicaid expansion or limited employment and economic growth — all upstream drivers of overdose and suffering.

    Simply put, an increase in overdose deaths is not the result of society’s inability to get tough on crime, or even the need for more biomedical treatment. Rather, overdose deaths persist due to an unwillingness to acknowledge that treatment expansion and more or harsher punishment fail to address gaping social wounds

    Communication: Start Using Language That Reveals the Roots of Unequal Suffering

    As long as policymakers, politicians, and journalists continue to use inaccurate terms like “opioid crisis/epidemic,” opportunities are missed to discuss and address the causes and effects of substance use and overdose. We advocate for talking instead about “opioid impact” or “overdose impact.” A more neutral term like impact is less stigmatizing and hyperbolic, and thus less marginalizing for those directly affected. Impact is also more flexible — not all drug use is harmful, nor leads to substance use disorder, illness, or overdose. Impact is a more accurate and flexible term to allow for discussion of people’s lived experiences with substances.

    Even so, it may not go far enough. As a parallel example, public pressure and justice-oriented advocacy shifted public conversation and journalistic style from talking about human beings as “illegal” to “undocumented.” But referring to these same folks as “economic refugees” would be even more accurate and less stigmatizing. Similarly, impact is a more useful term than “crisis” or “epidemic” when referring to patterns of opioid-related overdose and substance use-related illness. And, terminology that clearly unmasks the deeper roots of unequal suffering would be even better.

    A person using drugs is not a disease vector nor the precipitator of a crisis. What we witness in communities like Philadelphia, Austin, and Asheville are not drug-related epidemics or naturally occurring crises. The harms impacting these communities are symptoms of destructive social policies that ensure the most vulnerable populations remain vulnerable, shamed, and disproportionately suffering from the very problems for which they are blamed. 

    So where do we go from here? We can start by answering this with another question: How might our conversations, and thus policy and response efforts change, if we use language that reveals the structural roots of suffering instead of further contributing to stigma and hysteria that shames the people who are most directly affected?

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Germany Doesn’t Have An Opioid Crisis. Here’s Why. 

    Germany Doesn’t Have An Opioid Crisis. Here’s Why. 

    One German doctor believes the country’s hesitance to prescribe opioids plays a major role in helping avert a crisis.

    With recent stories warning about addiction taking hold in India and Australia, it can seem like the opioid epidemic is much larger than North America. However, Germany has largely avoided the crisis, in part because of its approach to pain management and in part because when addiction does arise, it is treated more quickly and effectively. 

    While opioid prescription rates in the United States have been rising exponentially, they’ve only increased slightly in Germany, NBC News reported.

    Dr. Peter Raiser is the deputy managing director at the German Center for Addiction Issues. He said that healthcare providers in the country take a much more controlled approach to opioid pain pills. That’s kept prescription rates relatively stable, even while they skyrocketed in other Western countries. 

    Raiser said, “Among the most important reasons we do not face a similar opioid crisis seems to be a more responsible and restrained practice of prescription.”

    Doctors Need Special Permission To Prescribe Opioids

    A major difference is that opioids are not a first-line option for pain management in Germany, as they often are in the United States. Doctors need special permission to prescribe opioids to a patient. In order to be granted that permission, they need to show that they’ve trial alternative treatments and medications, and that those have been unsuccessful. Then, patients need to be screened for addiction risk. 

    University of Hamburg psychiatrist Dr. Dieter Naber said those precautions lower the number of opioid prescriptions that are written. 

    He said, “Here in Germany, they prescribe opiates if all the other drugs don’t work. It’s much, much, much more difficult.”

    Affordable Healthcare Means More Doctor Visits

    In part because opioids are less prevalent, opioid use disorder is also less common in Germany. About 0.2% of Germans live with opioid use disorder, compared with 0.6% of Americans. 

    One reason may be because Germans are more likely to keep in touch with the doctors that prescribed their opioids, since healthcare is cheaper than it is in the United States. Since they’re seeing patients more frequently, doctors are better able to spot signs of opioid abuse. 

    When Germans do become addicted to opioids, they’re much less likely to die than their American counterparts with substance use disorder, since treatment is more affordable and widely available.

    Naber explained, “Money regarding treatment is really not an issue here.” 

    In 2016, 198 Americans per one million died of drug overdoses, compared to just 21 Germans per million

    Harm Reduction In Action

    For people who are not willing to go into treatment, Germany has harm reduction programs, including more than 20 safe injection sites. The United States has none (although some cities are considering plans). 

    Dr. Andres Roman-Urrestarazu, a University of Cambridge researcher, said the German approach recognizes addiction as a more complicated and nuanced problem that requires a variety of solutions. 

    “We know harm reduction works in terms of dealing with the problem of mortality,” he said. 

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Senator Urged AGs To Accept Settlement While On Sackler Payroll, Source Says

    Senator Urged AGs To Accept Settlement While On Sackler Payroll, Source Says

    Allegations surrounding Luther Strange’s role in the opioid settlements have created a deeper partisan divide.

    The opioid epidemic has been claiming lives across the country and affecting families no matter their socioeconomic status, race or political affiliation. And yet, a partisan divide has emerged in regards to the settlement with Purdue Pharma, thanks in part to one prominent Republican who was working with the Sacklers, the family that owns Purdue. 

    Conflict Of Interest

    NPR reported that Luther Strange, former Alabama attorney general and senator for that state, was working as a lawyer for the Sacklers at the same time that he was urging other Republican attorneys general to accept the proposed settlement deal. 

    At a meeting of the Republican Attorneys General Association, which took place over the summer in West Virginia, Strange allegedly urged attorneys general to accept the settlement with Purdue, while he was on the Sackler’s payroll. 

    Publicly, Strange has spoken out against the hiring of private lawyers to help craft the lawsuits against Big Pharma. He’s also said that using public nuisance laws to pursue companies could have wide-ranging impacts. 

    “I’ve written on this recently because it is a blooming problem and issue around the country,” he said in June. 

    The State Divide

    States are split almost evenly about whether to accept the proposed settlement with Purdue. The settlement would see the Sackler family contribute $3 billion of their personal money, but many attorneys general feel this is not enough, compared with the massive amount of profits that the family pulled from the company. 

    NPR found that opinions on the plan are split largely along part lines. Only two Democratic attorneys general are in favor of the settlement, with 20 opposing it. On the other hand, most Republicans are in favor of the settlement, with some exceptions.

    Richard Ausness studies opioid litigation at the University of Kentucky and says that the partisan divide can be explained by underlying differences about the purpose of the settlement. 

    He said, “Some of the Democratic politicians, more so than the Republicans, are on a crusade. This is a moral issue for them, not just simply a matter of economics. They want to punish the drug companies for what they did, and not simply make a deal with them.”

    Ausness pointed out that Republicans are less likely to want to sue companies, and that they have traditionally been more closely aligned with Big Pharma. 

    Oklahoma Attorney General Mike Hunter, a Republican, was widely praised for securing a $270 million settlement with Purdue Pharma and a ruling in favor of the state against Johnson & Johnson. While Hunter has secured millions in funding for his state, he was criticized by his party and was nearly defeated in a recent primary. 

    Over the summer, Hunter said, “It’s been tough. The extent to which this lawsuit was part of the discussion during the election was certainly regrettable. That was something that certainly gave me pause.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Sober Storylines Make Appearance In Theater 

    Sober Storylines Make Appearance In Theater 

    Though a handful of plays address addiction and stigma, there are still some hurdles to overcome in theater.  

    As the opioid epidemic continues to claim lives, sobriety and recovery are becoming more prominent themes in theater.

    According to the New York Times, more playwrights are tackling the tough issues, often as a result of heaving dealt with it themselves. 

    Sean Daniels is one such playwright, having written the autobiographical play The White Chip. The main character in the play struggles with alcohol use, which ultimately leads to him losing his job. 

    Daniels has been sober for eight years and wrote the first version of the play when we was in treatment. “I was just trying to process what was happening with me, just as an exercise to get it out,” he said. 

    Though writing helped Daniels’ process, he says he also did so in order to fill a gap in the theater world. 

    “When I started out, I said, ‘I’m going to read all the great books and all the great plays about recovery and all the movies,’” Daniels said, “and there’s really not.”

    Starting A Conversation About Sobriety Instead Of Keeping It In The Dark

    Once Daniels wrote the play, he says others in the industry started coming out of the woodwork. 

    “I really thought I was the only person in our industry who couldn’t hold their liquor,” he said. “And then once I got sober, like every fourth person came up to me and said, ‘I’m so glad you’re sober, I’ve been sober for 11 years.’ And part of me was like, ‘Listen, I’m so happy for you, but where were you two years ago when I was struggling?’ Why is it such a top-notch secret thing when it would have been great if that had just been part of the conversation?”

    Though plays such as Daniels’ do play a role in destigmatizing substance use disorder, there are still some hurdles to overcome.  

    “The conventional form of Western stories—beginning, middle, end—doesn’t do addiction stories terribly well because recovery, in particular, doesn’t have a concrete end point,” Duncan Macmillan, author of the 2015 play People, Places & Things, explained. “It’s just something you live with and do every day, every hour, for the rest of your life.”

    Subject Matter That Hits Close To Home

    Even so, the storylines hit home for some. The actress who played Emma in People, Places & Things says she has been approached after shows by people who have been inclined to examine their own drinking habits and maybe stop altogether. 

    Daniels also adds that when performing for those in recovery and therapists, it was “incredibly humbling and instructive.”

    According to Craig Lucas, writer of the recovery play I Was Most Alive With You, on-stage storylines align greatly with those in real life. 

    He says characters in the play are “learning to live gracefully with what life presents you.”

    “Whatever the boulder in the road is,” he said, “you wrap your arms around it.”

    View the original article at thefix.com