Commentary

Beyond the opioids


 

Control drug supply

Illicit drug supply used to be centrally controlled and reasonably well understood by law enforcement. Today, the illegal supply of addicting chemicals is global, innovative, massive, and decentralized. More drugs, including opioids, are now manufactured and delivered to users in higher potency, at lower prices, and with greater convenience than ever before. At the same time, illegal drug suppliers are moving away from agriculturally produced drugs such as marijuana, cocaine, and heroin to purely synthetic drugs such as synthetic cannabis, methamphetamine, and fentanyl. These synthetics do not require growing fields that are difficult to conceal, nor do they require farmers, or complex, clandestine, and vulnerable modes of transportation.

Instead, these new drugs can be synthesized in small and mobile laboratories located in any part of the globe and delivered anonymously, often by mail, to the users’ addresses. In addition, there remains ample illegal access to the older addicting agricultural chemicals and access to the many addicting legal chemicals that are widely used in the practice of medicine (for example, prescription drugs, including opioids). These abundant and varied sources make addicting drugs widely available to millions of Americans. Strong supply reduction efforts are needed. We must use the Drug Enforcement Administration to increase the cost of doing business in the illegal drug supply chain, and decrease access to drugs by bolstering interdiction and reducing precursor access. We can work to screen packages for drugs sent by U.S. mail or other express services.

It is gratifying to see so many of the missing pieces identified in the classic report3 published in 2012 by Columbia University in New York. Health care providers and professionals-in-training are being taught addiction medicine principles and practices. The Surgeon General has helped mobilize the public response to this crisis, and rightly suggested4 that everyone learn how to use and carry naloxone. Researchers are refocused on more than supply reduction.5 In addition, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) are working on delivery service improvements, developing nonopioid pain medications, and new treatments for addiction.

Increase access to naloxone

Increasing access to the opioid reversal medication is critical. Because of the surge in opioid overdose–related mortality, considerable resources have been devoted to emergency response and the widespread dissemination of the mu-opioid receptor antagonist naloxone.6

Naloxone should be readily available without prescription and at a price that makes access practical for emergency technicians and any concerned citizen. Administering naloxone should be analogous to CPR or cardioversion. They are similar, in that they are life-saving actions, but the target within the patient is the brain, rather than the heart. CPR education and cardioversion training efforts and access have been promoted well across the United States and can be done for naloxone.

Another comparison has been made between naloxone and giving an EpiPen to an allergic person in an anaphylaxis emergency or crisis. We need and want to rescue, resuscitate, and revive the overdosed patient and give the person another chance to make a change. We want to administer naloxone and get the patient evaluated and into long-term treatment. Now, rapid return to drug use is common after overdose reversal. We need to use overdose reversal as a path to treatment and see that it is sustained to long-term abstinence from drug use. The most recent report on the high cost of drug use correctly points out that none of the current treatment and policy proposals can reduce substantially the number of overdose deaths.1 Among 11 interventions analyzed by those researchers, making naloxone more available resulted in the greatest number of addiction deaths prevented.

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