Meet the Sacklers: The Family That's Killing Millions (Maybe More Than Stalin)
- November 22, 2017 • 81,336 views
- Opioids are now the leading cause of death among Americans under the age of 50. Between 2002 and 2015, more than 202,600 Americans died from overdosing on opioids
- The massive increase in opioid sales has been blamed on an orchestrated marketing plan aimed at misinforming doctors about the addictive potential of these drugs
- Purdue Pharma was one of the most successful in this regard, driving sales of OxyContin up from $48 million in 1996 to $1.5 billion in 2002
- Purdue Pharma is owned by the Sackler family, whose estimated worth is about $14 billion. While well-known for their philanthropic pursuits, the Sacklers have been careful not to associate the family name with Purdue Pharma or OxyContin
- In 2007, Purdue Pharma pleaded guilty to charges of misbranding OxyContin “with intent to defraud and mislead the public,” and paid $634 million in fines. A non-prosecution agreement accompanying the settlement shielded the Sackler family members from personal accountability
By Dr. Mercola
The U.S. has a massive opioid addiction problem. According to the U.S. surgeon general, more Americans now use prescription opioids than smoke cigarettes,1 and addiction to narcotic pain relievers now costs the U.S. more than $193 billion each year. The Manchester, New Hampshire, fire department recently said it now responds to more calls for drug overdoses than fires.2 That's not so surprising when you consider that opioids are now the leading cause of death among Americans under the age of 50.3
The following graph by the National Institute on Drug Abuse shows the progressive incline in overdose deaths related to opioid pain relievers between 2002 and 2015.4 This does not include deaths from heroin addiction, which we now know is a common side effect of getting hooked on these powerful prescription narcotics. In all, we're looking at just over 202,600 deaths in this 13-year time frame alone.5
In 2015, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved OxyContin (an extended-release version of oxycodone) for children as young as 11,6 thereby opening the gate for narcotic addiction among children and young teens as well. In July 2015, The Fix7,8 wrote about the Sackler family, owners of Purdue Pharma, who that year made it onto Forbes' Top 20 billionaires list9 — in large part due to the burgeoning sales of OxyContin.
About 80 percent of heroin drug addicts report starting out on painkillers such as OxyContin.10 Indeed, prescription opioids are now recognized as the primary gateway drug to heroin and other illicit drug use, and prescription painkillers — not illicit drugs — are the most commonly abused drugs in the U.S. As noted by Zachary Siegel, writing for The Fix,11 "It's easy to get rich when health care providers write 259 million prescriptions for painkillers, enough for every American adult to have a bottle full of pills."
The massive increase in opioid sales has been repeatedly blamed on an orchestrated marketing plan aimed at misinforming doctors about the addictive potential of these drugs. Purdue Pharma was one of the most successful in this regard, driving sales of OxyContin up from $48 million in 1996 to $1.5 billion in 2002.12
Purdue's sales representatives — who received handsome incentives and bonuses for OxyContin sales — were extensively coached on how to downplay the drug's addictive potential, claiming addiction occurring in less than 1 percent of patients being treated for pain.
As noted by Dr. Irfan Dhalla, a drug-safety researcher, "Purdue played a very large role in making physicians feel comfortable about opioids."13 Statistics reveal this marketing claim to be an outright lie. In reality, studies show addiction affects about 26 percent of those using opioids for chronic noncancer pain, and 1 in 550 patients on opioid therapy dies from opioid-related causes within 2.5 years of their first prescription!14
A potential part of the problem is the fact that no specific individuals have ever been charged. None of the members of the Sackler family was ever charged with any kind of misdeed, for example, and owners and corporate leaders of other drug companies have also walked away scot-free.
The Sacklers' profiteering from the opioid abuse epidemic they helped engineer was again highlighted in Esquire16 in mid-October, as well as The New Yorker.17 After recounting the family's extensive philanthropic endeavors18 and notorious "pursuit of naming rights," Esquire journalist Christopher Glazek writes:
You may want to believe that the Sackler family, while being the sole owners of Purdue Pharma, personally had nothing to do with the corporate decisions that fueled the epidemic but, according to Glazek, that's not true.
"Few are aware that during the crucial period of OxyContin's development and promotion, Sackler family members actively led Purdue's day-to-day affairs, filling the majority of its board slots and supplying top executives," he writes. In other words, Sackler family members were fully aware of, and involved with, the marketing machinations behind OxyContin.
Arthur's two brothers, Mortimer and Raymond, ran the company. Arthur made a name for himself in drug advertising, which at the time was relegated to "detail men" who sold medicines to doctors by going door-to-door.
Arthur believed, and rightfully so, that print ads in medical journals would be a great way to boost drug sales, and in 1952 published the first color drug ad in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA). He later went on to develop an ad campaign for Valium, made by Roche. Glazek writes:
Arthur's daughter, Elizabeth Sackler, described by Glazer as "a historian of feminist art who sits on the board of the Brooklyn Museum and supports a variety of progressive causes," has "emphatically distanced" herself from her cousin, Richard, and Purdue Pharma, noting in an email to Glazer that "Neither I, nor my siblings, nor my children have ever had ownership in or any benefit whatsoever from Purdue Pharma or OxyContin."
These groups were instrumental in pressuring regulators into making pain assessment one of the vital signs20 recorded at every doctor's visit. The inclusion of pain as "the fifth vital sign" has since become one of the hidden drivers behind opioid prescriptions, as nothing lowers a patient's pain score as much as a narcotic pain reliever, thereby assuring the doctor will maintain a higher patient satisfaction rating.
In 2015, 33,091 Americans died from an opioid overdose. Nearly one-third of them, 15,281, were by prescription.26,27,28 Back pain, which is of the most common health complaints across the globe, has also become one of the most common reasons for an opioid prescription. And, if you have back pain and suffer depression or anxiety you're at particularly high risk for opioid abuse and addiction, research shows.29
Despite its many risks, which include birth defects and the risk of addiction, nearly one-third of American women of childbearing age are now prescribed opioid painkillers32 and more than 14 percent of pregnant women were prescribed opioids during their pregnancy.33 Clearly, if you are planning a pregnancy or are pregnant, you should go to great lengths to avoid narcotic drugs. If you wouldn't consider taking heroin, you really should not take a narcotic pain reliever either.
Knowing that these drugs carry the serious risk of addiction, abuse and overdose, they should be prescribed sparingly and only for the most severe cases of pain, for which no other options are available. Unfortunately, the current medical system heavily discourages doctors from making much-needed changes in their prescription habits. As mentioned, patient pain assessment plays a significant role in a doctor's quality of care indicator, and nothing will eliminate pain as effectively as a narcotic.
Additionally, and in the midst of this epidemic of opioid overdose deaths, drug companies are still paying physicians to boost opioid sales by writing more prescriptions. According to a study published in the American Journal of Public Health,34 between August 2013 and December 2015, more than 375,000 non-research opioid-related payments were made to more than 68,000 physicians, totaling in excess of $46 million.
This amounts to 1 in 12 U.S. physicians collecting money from drug companies producing prescription opioids. The top 1 percent of physicians received nearly 83 percent of the payments, and the drug fentanyl, a synthetic opioid that can be anywhere from 500 to 1,000 percent more potent than morphine, was associated with the highest payments.
Many of the states struggling with the highest rates of overdose deaths, such as Indiana, Ohio and New Jersey, were also those showing the most opioid-related payments to physicians.
This suggests there's a direct link between doctors' kickbacks and patient addiction rates and deaths. It's also worth noting that a significant amount of people get their first opioid prescription from their dentist.35 This is particularly true for teenagers and young adults.36 Half of all opioids are also prescribed to people with mental health problems.37
The U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) was well aware of the fact that drug distributors were sending extraordinarily large shipments of opioids — hundreds of millions of pills — to pharmacies across the U.S., and that people were dying from their misuse; yet rather than taking steps to stop the massacre, industry lobbyists and Congress made it virtually impossible for DEA agents to take action.
With this new information about the Sacklers, we now have a good idea of where the financing came from to facilitate the opioid distribution that Rannazzisi was seeking to shut down. Rannazzisi led the DEA's Office of Diversion Control, which specifically regulates and investigates the drug industry.
According to Rannazzisi, "This is an industry that's out of control. What they want to do is do what they want to do, and not worry about what the law is. And if they don't follow the law in drug supply, people die." As reported by CBS News:41
However, according to Glazer, the family "will likely emerge untouched: Because of a sweeping non-prosecution agreement negotiated during the 2007 settlement, most new criminal litigation against Purdue can only address activity that occurred after that date. Neither Richard nor any other family members have occupied an executive position at the company since 2003." The same safe and rosy future is not guaranteed the tens of millions of Americans who fall victim to opioid addiction each year.
It's extremely important to be fully aware of the addictive potential of opioid drugs, and to seriously weigh your need for them. Once you start to develop a tolerance to them, meaning your regular dosage is no longer providing the same relief it did in the beginning, addiction is close at hand, and can develop faster than you might think.
Drug addiction is an extremely complex and difficult-to-treat condition that has the power to demolish and undo everything you've accomplished so far in life — or put the brakes on any advancement you may have hoped for. You stand to lose not only your health but also your family and your job.
There are many other ways to address pain. Below is a long list of suggestions. If you are in pain that is tolerable, please try these options first, before resorting to prescription painkillers of any kind. If you need a pain reliever, consider an over-the-counter (OTC) option. Research47 shows prescription-strength naproxen (Naprosyn, sold OTC in lower dosages as Aleve) provides the same pain relief as more dangerous narcotic painkillers.
+ Sources and Refer
The U.S. has a massive opioid addiction problem. According to the U.S. surgeon general, more Americans now use prescription opioids than smoke cigarettes,1 and addiction to narcotic pain relievers now costs the U.S. more than $193 billion each year. The Manchester, New Hampshire, fire department recently said it now responds to more calls for drug overdoses than fires.2 That's not so surprising when you consider that opioids are now the leading cause of death among Americans under the age of 50.3
The following graph by the National Institute on Drug Abuse shows the progressive incline in overdose deaths related to opioid pain relievers between 2002 and 2015.4 This does not include deaths from heroin addiction, which we now know is a common side effect of getting hooked on these powerful prescription narcotics. In all, we're looking at just over 202,600 deaths in this 13-year time frame alone.5
Misleading Marketing Created the Opioid Epidemic
How did we get into this mess? Part of the problem, from the very beginning, has been false advertising. This past summer I wrote about how a single paragraph in a 1980 letter to the editor in the New England Journal of Medicine became the basis of a drug marketing campaign that has since led hundreds of millions of people straight into the arms of addiction and/or death.In 2015, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved OxyContin (an extended-release version of oxycodone) for children as young as 11,6 thereby opening the gate for narcotic addiction among children and young teens as well. In July 2015, The Fix7,8 wrote about the Sackler family, owners of Purdue Pharma, who that year made it onto Forbes' Top 20 billionaires list9 — in large part due to the burgeoning sales of OxyContin.
About 80 percent of heroin drug addicts report starting out on painkillers such as OxyContin.10 Indeed, prescription opioids are now recognized as the primary gateway drug to heroin and other illicit drug use, and prescription painkillers — not illicit drugs — are the most commonly abused drugs in the U.S. As noted by Zachary Siegel, writing for The Fix,11 "It's easy to get rich when health care providers write 259 million prescriptions for painkillers, enough for every American adult to have a bottle full of pills."
The massive increase in opioid sales has been repeatedly blamed on an orchestrated marketing plan aimed at misinforming doctors about the addictive potential of these drugs. Purdue Pharma was one of the most successful in this regard, driving sales of OxyContin up from $48 million in 1996 to $1.5 billion in 2002.12
Purdue's sales representatives — who received handsome incentives and bonuses for OxyContin sales — were extensively coached on how to downplay the drug's addictive potential, claiming addiction occurring in less than 1 percent of patients being treated for pain.
As noted by Dr. Irfan Dhalla, a drug-safety researcher, "Purdue played a very large role in making physicians feel comfortable about opioids."13 Statistics reveal this marketing claim to be an outright lie. In reality, studies show addiction affects about 26 percent of those using opioids for chronic noncancer pain, and 1 in 550 patients on opioid therapy dies from opioid-related causes within 2.5 years of their first prescription!14
A Fortune Built on Dangerous Misrepresentations
In 2007, Purdue Pharma pleaded guilty to charges of misbranding "with intent to defraud and mislead the public," and paid $634 million in fines — an amount said to represent 90 percent of its profits from OxyContin sales during the time of the offense.15 Fast-forward a decade, and it seems this fine did little to alter the company's moral compass. Opioids are still massively misrepresented, misused and abused by tens of millions of Americans.A potential part of the problem is the fact that no specific individuals have ever been charged. None of the members of the Sackler family was ever charged with any kind of misdeed, for example, and owners and corporate leaders of other drug companies have also walked away scot-free.
The Sacklers' profiteering from the opioid abuse epidemic they helped engineer was again highlighted in Esquire16 in mid-October, as well as The New Yorker.17 After recounting the family's extensive philanthropic endeavors18 and notorious "pursuit of naming rights," Esquire journalist Christopher Glazek writes:
"To a remarkable degree, those who share in the billions appear to have abided by an oath of omertà : Never comment publicly on the source of the family's wealth. That may be because the greatest part of that $14 billion fortune … came from OxyContin, the narcotic painkiller regarded by many public-health experts as among the most dangerous products ever sold on a mass scale …
Even so, hardly anyone associates the Sackler name with their company's lone blockbuster drug. 'The Fords, Hewletts, Packards, Johnsons — all those families put their name on their product because they were proud,' said Keith Humphreys, a professor of psychiatry at Stanford University School of Medicine who has written extensively about the opioid crisis. 'The Sacklers have hidden their connection to their product' …
The family's leaders have pulled off three of the great marketing triumphs of the modern era: The first is selling OxyContin; the second is promoting the Sackler name; and the third is ensuring that, as far as the public is aware, the first and second have nothing to do with one another."
Opioid Epidemic Equates to 9/11 Massacre Every Three Weeks, Year-Round
According to President Trump's Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis, led by New Jersey governor Chris Christie, opioids kill an estimated 142 Americans each day, a death toll equivalent to a "September 11th every three weeks," and Purdue Pharma was one of leading engineers of this still ongoing massacre.You may want to believe that the Sackler family, while being the sole owners of Purdue Pharma, personally had nothing to do with the corporate decisions that fueled the epidemic but, according to Glazek, that's not true.
"Few are aware that during the crucial period of OxyContin's development and promotion, Sackler family members actively led Purdue's day-to-day affairs, filling the majority of its board slots and supplying top executives," he writes. In other words, Sackler family members were fully aware of, and involved with, the marketing machinations behind OxyContin.
Sackler Marketing Specialty — Inflated Claims
Glazek provides a summarized history of the Sackler family's rise to wealth and power. In 1952, Arthur Sackler, son of immigrants living in Flatbush, Brooklyn, bought Purdue Frederick, a company founded in 1892 that sold patent medicines. It's flagship product back then was Gray's Glycerine Tonic, a remedy peddled as a general cure-all.Arthur's two brothers, Mortimer and Raymond, ran the company. Arthur made a name for himself in drug advertising, which at the time was relegated to "detail men" who sold medicines to doctors by going door-to-door.
Arthur believed, and rightfully so, that print ads in medical journals would be a great way to boost drug sales, and in 1952 published the first color drug ad in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA). He later went on to develop an ad campaign for Valium, made by Roche. Glazek writes:
"This posed a challenge, because the effects of the medication were nearly indistinguishable from those of Librium, another Roche tranquilizer that was already on the market. Arthur differentiated Valium by audaciously inflating its range of indications.
Whereas Librium was sold as a treatment for garden-variety anxiety, Valium was positioned as an elixir for a problem Arthur christened 'psychic tension.' According to his ads, psychic tension, the forebear of today's 'stress,' was the secret culprit behind a host of somatic conditions, including heartburn, gastrointestinal issues, insomnia, and restless-leg syndrome."As a result of this campaign, Valium became the most widely prescribed drug in the U.S., making a record-breaking $100 million in sales. According to Glazer, it was this "original marketing insight" that drove OxyContin's success as well — "That simple but profitable idea was to take a substance with addictive properties … and market it as a salve for a vast range of indications."
Marketing Messaging Was No Mistake
Glazer also notes that one of the Sackler family members that appears to have been heavily involved in the marketing of OxyContin was Raymond's eldest son, Richard Sackler.19"'At all the meetings, that was a constant source of discussion — 'What else can we use the Contin system [editor's note: a slow-release system] for?'said Peter Lacouture, a senior director of clinical research at Purdue from 1991 to 2001. 'And that's where Richard would fire some ideas — maybe antibiotics, maybe chemotherapy — he was always out there digging' …
In the tradition of his uncle Arthur, Richard was also fascinated by sales messaging. 'He was very interested in the commercial side and also very interested in marketing approaches,' said Sally Allen Riddle, Purdue's former executive director for product management. 'He didn't always wait for the research results.'"Despite his close involvement in the business, heading up the firm's research and development division, as well as its sales and marketing division, Richard's name does not appear anywhere on the Purdue Pharma website. Between 1999 and 2003 he also served as company president, after which he became co-chairman of the board.
Arthur's daughter, Elizabeth Sackler, described by Glazer as "a historian of feminist art who sits on the board of the Brooklyn Museum and supports a variety of progressive causes," has "emphatically distanced" herself from her cousin, Richard, and Purdue Pharma, noting in an email to Glazer that "Neither I, nor my siblings, nor my children have ever had ownership in or any benefit whatsoever from Purdue Pharma or OxyContin."
The Rise of Narcotic Entitlement for Every American
As noted by Glazer, while Purdue didn't invent the movement incited by pain specialists in the mid-'90s, who were calling for more and better pain management strategies, the company certainly took full advantage of it. Purdue and other drug companies in the business of making painkillers created patient advocacy front groups such as the American Pain Society, the American Academy of Pain Medicine, and Purdue's own group, Partners Against Pain.These groups were instrumental in pressuring regulators into making pain assessment one of the vital signs20 recorded at every doctor's visit. The inclusion of pain as "the fifth vital sign" has since become one of the hidden drivers behind opioid prescriptions, as nothing lowers a patient's pain score as much as a narcotic pain reliever, thereby assuring the doctor will maintain a higher patient satisfaction rating.
"As an internal strategy document put it, Purdue's ambition was to 'attach an emotional aspect to noncancer pain' so that doctors would feel pressure to 'treat it more seriously and aggressively.' The company rebranded pain relief as a sacred right: a universal narcotic entitlement available not only to the terminally ill but to every American," Glazer writes.This "universal narcotic entitlement" is now killing an unprecedented number of Americans.21,22 According to the latest data from the National Center for Health Statistics, life expectancy for both men and women dropped between 2014 and 2015 for the first time in two decades, and drug overdose deaths appear to be a significant contributor.23,24,25
In 2015, 33,091 Americans died from an opioid overdose. Nearly one-third of them, 15,281, were by prescription.26,27,28 Back pain, which is of the most common health complaints across the globe, has also become one of the most common reasons for an opioid prescription. And, if you have back pain and suffer depression or anxiety you're at particularly high risk for opioid abuse and addiction, research shows.29
Opioids Are by Far the Most Lethal Medications Available
The most common drugs involved in prescription opioid overdose deaths include30 methadone, oxycodone (such as OxyContin®) and hydrocodone (such as Vicodin®). As noted by Dr. Tom Frieden, former director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC): "We know of no other medication routinely used for a nonfatal condition that kills patients so frequently."31Despite its many risks, which include birth defects and the risk of addiction, nearly one-third of American women of childbearing age are now prescribed opioid painkillers32 and more than 14 percent of pregnant women were prescribed opioids during their pregnancy.33 Clearly, if you are planning a pregnancy or are pregnant, you should go to great lengths to avoid narcotic drugs. If you wouldn't consider taking heroin, you really should not take a narcotic pain reliever either.
Knowing that these drugs carry the serious risk of addiction, abuse and overdose, they should be prescribed sparingly and only for the most severe cases of pain, for which no other options are available. Unfortunately, the current medical system heavily discourages doctors from making much-needed changes in their prescription habits. As mentioned, patient pain assessment plays a significant role in a doctor's quality of care indicator, and nothing will eliminate pain as effectively as a narcotic.
Additionally, and in the midst of this epidemic of opioid overdose deaths, drug companies are still paying physicians to boost opioid sales by writing more prescriptions. According to a study published in the American Journal of Public Health,34 between August 2013 and December 2015, more than 375,000 non-research opioid-related payments were made to more than 68,000 physicians, totaling in excess of $46 million.
This amounts to 1 in 12 U.S. physicians collecting money from drug companies producing prescription opioids. The top 1 percent of physicians received nearly 83 percent of the payments, and the drug fentanyl, a synthetic opioid that can be anywhere from 500 to 1,000 percent more potent than morphine, was associated with the highest payments.
Many of the states struggling with the highest rates of overdose deaths, such as Indiana, Ohio and New Jersey, were also those showing the most opioid-related payments to physicians.
This suggests there's a direct link between doctors' kickbacks and patient addiction rates and deaths. It's also worth noting that a significant amount of people get their first opioid prescription from their dentist.35 This is particularly true for teenagers and young adults.36 Half of all opioids are also prescribed to people with mental health problems.37
Industry, Distributors and Congress Have Much to Answer For
In a recent episode of 60 Minutes,38 whistleblower Joe Rannazzisi lays the blame for the opioid crisis squarely on the shoulders of the drug industry — especially the drug distributors — and Congress.39,40The U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) was well aware of the fact that drug distributors were sending extraordinarily large shipments of opioids — hundreds of millions of pills — to pharmacies across the U.S., and that people were dying from their misuse; yet rather than taking steps to stop the massacre, industry lobbyists and Congress made it virtually impossible for DEA agents to take action.
With this new information about the Sacklers, we now have a good idea of where the financing came from to facilitate the opioid distribution that Rannazzisi was seeking to shut down. Rannazzisi led the DEA's Office of Diversion Control, which specifically regulates and investigates the drug industry.
According to Rannazzisi, "This is an industry that's out of control. What they want to do is do what they want to do, and not worry about what the law is. And if they don't follow the law in drug supply, people die." As reported by CBS News:41
"His greatest ire is reserved for the distributors — some of them multibillion dollar, Fortune 500 companies. They are the middlemen that ship the pain pills from manufacturers, like Purdue Pharma and Johnson & Johnson to drug stores all over the country. Rannazzisi accuses the distributors of fueling the opioid epidemic by turning a blind eye to pain pills being diverted to illicit use."
Opioids Have Never Been Proven Safe or Effective Beyond Six Weeks of Treatment
In April 2016, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published a paper in which it noted that:42"Most placebo-controlled, randomized trials of opioids have lasted six weeks or less, and we are aware of no study that has compared opioid therapy with other treatments in terms of long-term (more than 1 year) outcomes related to pain, function, or quality of life. The few randomized trials to evaluate opioid efficacy for longer than six weeks had consistently poor results.
In fact, several studies have showed that use of opioids for chronic pain may actually worsen pain and functioning, possibly by potentiating pain perception. A 3-year prospective observational study of more than 69,000 postmenopausal women with recurrent pain conditions showed that patients who had received opioid therapy were less likely to have improvement in pain … and had worsened function …
An observational case–control study of patients undergoing orthopedic surgery showed that those receiving long-term opioid therapy had significantly higher levels of preoperative hyperalgesia. After surgery, patients who had received long-term opioid therapy reported higher pain intensity … in the recovery room than patients who had not been taking opioids."Another 2016 paper43 found nearly half of all unemployed men between the ages of 25 and 54 are using opioids on a daily basis. Two-thirds of them, about 2 million, are on prescription opioids. A follow-up study44 looking at the opioid epidemic's impact on the American labor force suggests chronic opioid use is in fact a major driver behind the decline in labor force participation, accounting for 20 percent of the increase in male unemployment between 1999 and 2015.
How You Can Avoid Becoming a Statistic
Attorney Mike Moore, who is currently representing the states of Ohio, Louisiana and Mississippi against Purdue Pharma, recently stated he has discovered evidence connecting the Sackler family "directly, and personally, to corporate misdeeds" committed in the '90s and 2000s, and says he's "looking really hard" at the possibility of suing certain Sackler family members personally.45 He and others also want Purdue's owners to fund opioid addiction treatment.46However, according to Glazer, the family "will likely emerge untouched: Because of a sweeping non-prosecution agreement negotiated during the 2007 settlement, most new criminal litigation against Purdue can only address activity that occurred after that date. Neither Richard nor any other family members have occupied an executive position at the company since 2003." The same safe and rosy future is not guaranteed the tens of millions of Americans who fall victim to opioid addiction each year.
It's extremely important to be fully aware of the addictive potential of opioid drugs, and to seriously weigh your need for them. Once you start to develop a tolerance to them, meaning your regular dosage is no longer providing the same relief it did in the beginning, addiction is close at hand, and can develop faster than you might think.
Drug addiction is an extremely complex and difficult-to-treat condition that has the power to demolish and undo everything you've accomplished so far in life — or put the brakes on any advancement you may have hoped for. You stand to lose not only your health but also your family and your job.
There are many other ways to address pain. Below is a long list of suggestions. If you are in pain that is tolerable, please try these options first, before resorting to prescription painkillers of any kind. If you need a pain reliever, consider an over-the-counter (OTC) option. Research47 shows prescription-strength naproxen (Naprosyn, sold OTC in lower dosages as Aleve) provides the same pain relief as more dangerous narcotic painkillers.
Eliminate or radically reduce most grains and sugars from your diet
Avoiding grains and sugars will lower your insulin and leptin
levels and decrease insulin and leptin resistance, which is one of
the most important reasons why inflammatory prostaglandins are
produced. That is why stopping sugar and sweets is so important to controlling your pain and other types of chronic illnesses. |
Take a high-quality, animal-based omega-3 fat
Omega-3 fats
are precursors to mediators of inflammation called prostaglandins. (In
fact, that is how anti-inflammatory painkillers work, by manipulating
prostaglandins.) Good sources include wild caught Alaskan salmon,
sardines and anchovies, which are all high in healthy omega-3s while
being low in contaminants such as mercury. As for supplements, my
favorite is krill oil, as it has a number of benefits superior to
fish oil. |
Optimize your sun exposure and production of vitamin D
Optimize your vitamin D by getting regular, appropriate sun
exposure, which will work through a variety of different mechanisms
to reduce your pain. Sun exposure
also has anti-inflammatory and pain relieving effects that are
unrelated to vitamin D production, and these benefits cannot be
obtained from a vitamin D supplement.Red, near-, mid- and far-infrared light therapy (photobiology) and/or infrared saunas may also be quite helpful as it promotes and speeds tissue healing, even deep inside the body. |
Medical cannabis
Medical marijuana
has a long history as a natural analgesic and is now legal in 29
states including Washington, D.C. You can learn more about the laws
in your state on medicalmarijuana.procon.org.48 |
Kratom
Kratom (Mitragyna speciosa) is another plant remedy that has become a popular opioid substitute.49
In August 2016, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration issued a
notice saying it was planning to ban kratom, listing it as a Schedule
1 controlled substance. However, following massive outrage from
kratom users who say opioids are their only alternative, the agency
reversed its decision.50Kratom is likely safer than an opioid for someone in serious and chronic pain. However, it's important to recognize that it is a psychoactive substance and should not be used carelessly. There's very little research showing how to use it safely and effectively, and it may have a very different effect from one person to the next. Also, while it may be useful for weaning people off opioids, kratom is in itself addictive. So, while it appears to be a far safer alternative to opioids, it's still a powerful and potentially addictive substance. So please, do your own research before trying it. |
Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT)
EFT is a drug-free approach for
pain management of all kinds. EFT borrows from the principles of
acupuncture in that it helps you balance out your subtle energy
system. It helps resolve underlying, often subconscious, and negative
emotions that may be exacerbating your physical pain. By stimulating
(tapping) well-established acupuncture points with your fingertips, you
rebalance your energy system, which tends to dissipate pain. |
Meditation and Mindfulness Training
Among volunteers who had never meditated before, those who
attended four 20-minute classes to learn a meditation technique
called focused attention (a form of mindfulness meditation)
experienced significant pain relief — a 40 percent reduction in pain
intensity and a 57 percent reduction in pain unpleasantness.51 |
Chiropractic
Many studies have confirmed that chiropractic management is much
safer and less expensive than allopathic medical treatments,
especially when used for pain such as low back pain. Qualified chiropractic, osteopathic and naturopathic physicians are reliable, as they have received extensive training in the management of musculoskeletal disorders during their course of graduate health care training, which lasts between four to six years. These health experts have comprehensive training in musculoskeletal management. |
Acupuncture
Research has discovered a "clear and robust" effect of acupuncture in the treatment of back, neck and shoulder pain, and osteoarthritis and headaches. |
Physical therapy
Physical therapy has been shown to be as good as surgery for painful conditions such as torn cartilage and arthritis. |
Foundation Training
Foundation training
is an innovative method developed by Dr. Eric Goodman to treat his
own chronic low back pain. It's an excellent alternative to painkillers
and surgery, as it actually addresses the cause of the problem. |
Massage
A systematic review and meta-analysis published in the journal
Pain Medicine included 60 high-quality and seven low-quality studies
that looked into the use of massage for various types of pain,
including muscle and bone pain, headaches, deep internal pain,
fibromyalgia pain and spinal cord pain.52The review revealed massage therapy relieves pain better than getting no treatment at all. When compared to other pain treatments like acupuncture and physical therapy, massage therapy still proved beneficial and had few side effects. In addition to relieving pain, massage therapy also improved anxiety and health-related quality of life. |
Astaxanthin
Astaxanthin is one of the most effective fat-soluble antioxidants
known. It has very potent anti-inflammatory properties and in many
cases works far more effectively than anti-inflammatory drugs. Higher
doses are typically required and you may need 8 milligrams (mg) or
more per day to achieve this benefit. |
Ginger
This herb has potent anti-inflammatory activity and offers pain
relief and stomach-settling properties. Fresh ginger works well
steeped in boiling water as a tea or grated into vegetable juice. |
Curcumin
In a study of osteoarthritis patients, those who added 200 mg of curcumin
a day to their treatment plan had reduced pain and increased
mobility. A past study also found that a turmeric extract composed of
curcuminoids blocked inflammatory pathways, effectively preventing
the overproduction of a protein that triggers swelling and pain.53 |
Boswellia
Also known as boswellin or "Indian frankincense," this herb contains specific active anti-inflammatory ingredients. |
Bromelain
This enzyme, found in pineapples, is a natural anti-inflammatory.
It can be taken in supplement form but eating fresh pineapple,
including some of the bromelain-rich stem, may also be helpful. |
Cetyl Myristoleate (CMO)
This oil, found in fish and dairy butter, acts as a joint
lubricant and anti-inflammatory. I have used this for myself to
relieve ganglion cysts and carpal tunnel syndrome. I used a topical
preparation for this. |
Evening Primrose, Black Currant and Borage Oils
These contain the essential fatty acid gamma-linolenic acid (GLA),
which is particularly useful for treating arthritic pain. |
Cayenne Cream
Also called capsaicin cream,
this spice comes from dried hot peppers. It alleviates pain by
depleting the body's supply of substance P, a chemical component of
nerve cells that transmits pain signals to your brain. |
Methods such as hot and cold packs, aquatic therapy, yoga, various mind-body techniques and cognitive behavioral therapy can also result in astonishing pain relief without drugs.
|
Grounding
Walking barefoot on the earth may also provide a certain measure of pain relief by combating inflammation. |
Mind-Body Therapies
Methods such as hot and cold packs, aquatic therapy, yoga, various mind-body techniques and cognitive behavioral therapy can also result in astonishing pain relief without drugs. |
Low-Dose Naltrexone (LDN)
Naltrexone is an opiate antagonist, originally developed in the
early 1960s for the treatment of opioid addiction. When taken at very
low doses (LDN, available only by prescription), it triggers
endorphin production, which can boost your immune function and ease
pain. |
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