It may not become common knowledge anytime soon, but if Shakespeare was right that the truth will out, Americans are headed for a remarkable realization.
The worst public health crisis in our time was brought about by the practice of medicine.
There's little precedent for the pivotal role of American health professionals in the creation of the Great Painkiller Plague of the early 2000s — a genie of opioid and opioid-equivalent use, addiction and early death that until now has been effectively mischaracterized as "opioid abuse," and which multiple federal entities have now begun scrambling to put back in the bottle.
In the past, great waves of sickness were spread through close contact, poor hygiene and tainted wells. Beginning in the 1990s, however, it fell upon unwitting doctors and a captured medical system to set in motion this drug group's signature trajectory in far too many users: tolerance, addiction, sobriety, relapse, overdose. That our medical system managed to trigger this by telling us something as unconvincing as it did says as much about our times as it does about the power of the opium poppy.
The system told us we could take heroin, more or less, for back pain.
The long-delayed correction of that lie may finally have arrived, to judge from the flurry of regulatory and legislative efforts now underway to reel in the propaganda of the opioid era. Congress is set to deliver comprehensive addiction and recovery legislation. The president has authorized a $1.1 billion initiative to combat addiction with new medications. And last month saw the release of new guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) that define long-term use of opioids as medically unsound.
Because the federal government cannot direct the activities of doctors, it will fall to the state medical boards and legislatures to give these guidelines teeth — to treat the professional practices that got us here as unethical and subject to sanction. It's hard to imagine those laws sweeping the land. But if Minnesota lawmakers should care to join Massachusetts and Florida in reigning in doctors, they now have official support from the federal agency for public health.
As of last month, the CDC has described opioid use as an epidemic, and one caused by prescribing, as opposed to the diversion of drugs produced for legitimate new use. It has been suggested that physicians offer the pills in no more than three-day doses, warning that, when it comes to opioids for non-cancer chronic pain, "for the vast majority of patients, the known, serious, and too-often fatal risks far outweigh the unproven and transient benefits."