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Brain research bulletin · Apr 2018
The opioid epidemic is an historic opportunity to improve both prevention and treatment.
- Robert L DuPont.
- Institute for Behavior and Health, Inc., 6191 Executive Blvd., Rockville, MD, 20852, United States. Electronic address: ContactUs@ibhinc.org.
- Brain Res. Bull. 2018 Apr 1; 138: 112-114.
AbstractThe current narrative describing the national opioid epidemic as the result of overprescribing opioid pain medicines fails to capture the full dimensions of the problem and leads to inadequate and even confounding solutions. Overlooked is the fact that polysubstance use is nearly ubiquitous among overdose deaths, demonstrating that the opioid overdose death problem is bigger than opioids. The foundation of the nation's opioid overdose crisis - and the totality of the nation's drug epidemic - is widespread recreational pharmacology, the use of drugs for fun or "self-medication." The national focus on opioid overdose deaths provides important new opportunities in both prevention and treatment to make fundamental changes to the way that substance use disorders and related problems are understood and managed. The first-ever US Surgeon General's report on addiction provides a starting point for systemic changes in the nation's approach to preventing, treating and managing substance use disorders as serious, chronic diseases. New prevention efforts need to encourage youth to grow to adulthood not using alcohol, nicotine, marijuana or other drugs for reasons of health. New addiction treatment efforts need to focus on achieving long-term recovery including no use of alcohol, marijuana and other drugs.Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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