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DEA Secretly OKs Killer Quantities of Oxy and Morphine

Weird

3rd-Eye Jedi
Veteran
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articl...ks-killer-quantities-of-oxy-and-morphine.html

he feds could choke off the supply of pills flooding American streets tomorrow. Instead, they let Big Pharma crank out 151 tons of it last year.The federal government is actively fueling a killer drug epidemic behind closed doors.
The Drug Enforcement Administration—tasked with fighting the war on drugs—has for the past two decades approved ever-greater quantities of controlled substances like oxycodone for manufacture and sale in the U.S. by pharmaceutical companies.
In 1993, the DEA allowed pharmaceutical companies to manufacture 3,520 kilograms of oxycodone. In 2015, the DEA authorized production of 137,500 kilograms of oxycodone. That’s a 39-fold increase in 22 years, the equivalent of turning two Buicks into four Boeing 737s. Either Americans are in 39 times more pain than we were 20 years ago, or something else is wrong.

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When I was researching my book, American Pain, about a young drug felon who hired a team of doctors and made millions selling oxycodone to addicts posing as pain patients, I dug up the staggering drug manufacturing numbers.
I learned that it isn’t just oxycodone production that the DEA has been jacking up each year. Between 1993 and 2015, the DEA has allowed the production of hydrocodone to increase 12-fold, the production of hydromorphone to increase 23-fold, and the production of fentanyl to increase 25-fold.
(While the DEA did reduce the oxy quota by 8 percent in 2015, possibly because fewer pill mills were around to sell the drugs, the DEA recently announced a small increase in next year’s quota.)
The secret process appears to be less hard bargaining and more rubber-stamping. Each pharmaceutical company applies to make a certain amount of a given controlled substance each year, but the DEA won’t reveal those numbers to the public. The companies and the DEA have negotiation meetings, the content of which is also not made public. The DEA then sets quotas based on “expected need.” The only information the DEA reveals each year is the total amounts requested by the entire industry and the total amounts the DEA is allowing them to produce. The DEA says it would be unfair to the pharmaceutical companies to reveal how many pills the individual companies wanted to manufacture.
These are the same pharmaceutical companies that in the mid-1990s began marketing opioids as safe, i.e., little to no potential for abuse, contradicting thousands of years of human experience with the opium poppy. They’re the same companies that launched massive campaigns to convince doctors that highly addictive narcotics were a first resort for patients with chronic pain.
Since 1999 there have been more than 221,000 fatal overdoses from prescription opiods and illegal heroin. Despite this grim toll, no one in the federal government seems interested in simply reducing the supply. Instead, the DEA and its partners in government have supported policies only if they do not step on Big Pharma’s production, like arresting doctors who prescribe pills for no good reason and funding drug-treatment programs.
Only one time this century, when the country was first becoming aware of OxyContin abuse, was there talk about choking off the drug supply.

South Florida man ran $15M pill mill that supplied Kentucky drug dealers, feds say
Sun Sentinel


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In 2001, the DEA asked Purdue Pharma, the maker of OxyContin, to consider providing the drug only to physicians trained in pain management. Purdue balked and Donnie R. Marshall, the then-DEA administrator, told Congress he was considering “rolling back those quotas to 1996 levels.” The pain industry said this would make drug prices skyrocket and pain patients suffer. Purdue didn’t budge, and the quota-cut idea vanished when new administrators came in.
Instead, the DEA has gone after bit players instead of Big Pharma. When hundreds of pill mills popped up in Florida after 2008, the DEA and other federal agencies cracked down hard, sending many owners and doctors away for long prison sentences.
That drove up pill prices, and millions of newly minted painkiller addicts began seeking their fixes from heroin. Painkiller production and deaths have leveled off for the moment, but fatal heroin overdoses have quadrupled, driving home the point that, whether the drugs come from the street or a pharmacy, the opioid epidemic is far from over.
Either Americans are in 39 times more pain than we were 20 years ago, or something else is wrong.


The DEA was created in 1973 by President Nixon to fight an “all-out global war on the drug menace.” Soon after it actually did that with success. When speed was popular in the ’70s, the DEA cut the amphetamine production quota by 90 percent and the illicit market dried up. A decade later, sedative-hypnotics like Quaaludes swept across the country, and the DEA cut the quota of the methaqualone by 74 percent, which effectively erased the problem.
Now, prescription opioids are killing far more people than speed or sedatives ever did, but the government has signed off on enormous hikes in the drug supply almost every year.
The idea of making more drugs during a drug epidemic baffled previous DEA administrators like the late Gene Haislip, former head of the DEA’s Office of Diversion Control. Haislip was in charge during the Quaalude crackdown. It hadn’t been easy to buck the powerful pharmaceutical industry, but, as he told a reporter shortly before his death: “You’ve got to have some kind of principles.”

Nobody is suggesting we do away with opioids altogether: They are a godsend for patients suffering from cancer or traumatic injuries. At the very least though, the DEA could use its quota power to force drug companies to make sure their addictive wares aren’t heading to the street. It’s a potent warning: Sell drugs to pill mills and we’ll cut your company’s quota in half.
Even the drug manufacturers who have ignored deaths, lawsuits, and fines might heed that threat.


John Temple is an associate professor of journalism at West Virginia University and the author of American Pain: How a Young Felon and His Team of Doctors Unleashed America’s Deadliest Drug Epidemic(Lyons Press, September 2015). Parts of this column were adapted from American Pain.
 

yesum

Well-known member
ICMag Donor
Veteran
When the Doctor prescribes it, then is it is medicine. When you grow a plant in your backyard and use it, well that is is either a drug or just wrong.

When the government gets their cut then whatever is generating that revenue is all American. When no cut is received then the devil must be in whatever it is that defies the holy government's right to a fair share.
 

HempKat

Just A Simple Old Dirt Farmer
Veteran
has for the past two decades approved ever-greater quantities of controlled substances like oxycodone for manufacture and sale in the U.S. by pharmaceutical companies.

This is because of our flawed medical system. One reason that pain pills were/are a popular choice is because they masked the symptoms but do nothing for the cause. This causes the patient to remain a steady customer. See we don't cure illnesses we treat the symptoms. This keeps the patient needing to see the doctor more often then someone that's healthy
 

aridbud

automeister
ICMag Donor
Veteran
This keeps the patient needing to see the doctor more often then someone that's healthy = managed care. It's not curing illnesses, it's managing them.
 

aridbud

automeister
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Either Americans are in 39 times more pain than we were 20 years ago, or something else is wrong.

Arthritis, I forget the #'s or %'s....it costs workers billions if not more in wasted productivity.

Then think about us "Baby Boomers". ....all of my friends, including myself are on some sort of pain prescription, OTC or RX.

Yes, pain management is on the rise.
 

Weird

3rd-Eye Jedi
Veteran
It is more than a flawed medical system

It is greed, that has manifested itself into our society in the way of profits driving business models and governments as well.
 

Terpz

Member
I don't mean to sound rude here, but most Doctors do not know shit. I am very allergic to wheat and dairy by-products as well as animal by-products. Long story short, about a year ago, I was prescribed (3) different medications THAT ALL contained by-products of which I told them I could not consume. They made me very sick, depleted my nutrients and left me unhealed. What I learned was (A) Doctors do not listen to their patients. (B) Doctors are trained off a tree diagram, meaning you throw curve balls and they have no idea what they are talking about. You would think a doctor would know the contents of the pill they are prescribing.. but no, they don't. Doctors seem to know absolutely nothing about nutrition. Nature always wins.
 

c2288

Member
FYI: Last disease that has been cured!! Managed care = MORE money for BIG Pharma. Watch what they do to our plant once its legalized.

"Two polio vaccines are used throughout the world to provide immunity to the virus that causes poliomyelitis (or polio). The first was developed by Jonas Salk through the use of HeLa cells and first tested in 1952. Announced to the world by Dr Thomas Francis Jr. on 12 April 1955,[1] it consists of an injected dose of inactivated (dead) poliovirus. An oral vaccine was developed by Albert Sabin using attenuated or weakened polio virus. Human trials of Sabin's vaccine began in 1957, and it was licensed in 1962. Interruption of person to person transmission of the virus by vaccination has been crucial in global polio eradication, since there is no long term carrier state for polio virus in immunocompetent individuals, polioviruses have no non-primate reservoir in nature, and survival of the virus in the environment for an extended period of time appears to be remote. The two vaccines have eliminated polio from most countries in the world,and reduced the worldwide incidence from an estimated 350,000 cases in 1988 to just 223 cases in 2012. Source
 

HempKat

Just A Simple Old Dirt Farmer
Veteran
What is really sad about the pain management issue is that for many they have stopped allowing narcotics and for others they have put them on things like Methadone which essentially is a synthetic narcotic that tests differently then opioids. I believe this denial to some and the change to methadone is in part to blame for the increased demand for heroin as patients search for other ways to support their opioid addiction.
 

Tudo

Troublemaker
Moderator
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Yet sick people CANNOT get prescriptions of pain meds filled without "shopping" for a place in which to fill them in the southern part of the state of Fla both east and west coasts.


Is it the same elsewhere in the country?
 

snuggles

Active member
a drugged society is a manageable society. eat-work-sleep-consume-die, that's the motto.
those "little helpers" just make it easier on us, after all..they only want what's best for us.
did i mention that i hate government in any shape or form?
thanks for this interesting article
good vibes
 

trichrider

Kiss My Ring
Veteran
victimized by Nixon and Kaiser Permanente.

eight years without that burden...whew, i may have made it!
 

HempKat

Just A Simple Old Dirt Farmer
Veteran
Yet sick people CANNOT get prescriptions of pain meds filled without "shopping" for a place in which to fill them in the southern part of the state of Fla both east and west coasts.


Is it the same elsewhere in the country?

More or less. In my area there are only four pain management options that are convenient and they're all pretty tight on giving out narcotics. If you end up getting black listed you're next closest option is a couple of hours drive on the highway away. What bugs me is all the doctors now refusing to give scripts for narcotics. From what I've gathered the government has made the regulations to be approved to prescribe narcotics has gotten to be such a burden that many doctors are giving up prescribing narcotics and sending patients that need them out to the pain management clinics.
 

LEF

Active member
Veteran
There is a reason why its called the health industry

Also maybe, since men are becoming more feminized, and society as a whole also, then it becomes ok to go to doctors, take pills for pain and mental disorders (admitting weakness)

Im all for medicine btw
I believe there is a time and place for rx meds, be it for physical or mental

not a fan of opiod pills or junk because of the addiction threat they pose

I do believe that there might be an exageration in the amounts that are prescribed... But its not only the docs, some people go in an lie to get some for themselves as well as to sell them on the streets

Its all the same united states lead world wide organized crime machine/enslavement
 

rives

Inveterate Tinkerer
Mentor
ICMag Donor
Veteran
I don't know where the truth actually lies, but the article certainly doesn't agree with my experience. I've taken time-release morphine for years as a result of cervical spine damage.

It is the biggest pain in the ass that you can imagine.

Triplicate scripts are required, so they cannot be faxed - they have to be hand delivered.

They can only prescribe a 30-day supply, and all of the druggists and doctors are scared shitless of prescribing early, so any trips out of town or vacations have to be scheduled around getting your Rx's filled.

The manufacturer's are under strict rationing for raw materials, so they frequently run out.

You are limited to using one drug store, the drug store can only have certain levels on hand, and their stocking orders have to be based on outstanding orders, so it isn't uncommon for them to run out and have to scramble like hell for even partial fills.

I've had the balance on a partial fill turned down until I used up the part that I received, even though it was only for 10 days on a month-long script.

The doctor is required to give you a urine test to make sure that you are taking the prescribed drugs and not "re-directing" them. If you have pot in your system, but don't have a recommendation on file, then you will get kicked out of the program.

Oh, and the doctor wants up to a week to process a script, the insurance company wants up to a week to approve it, the pharmacy wants X-amount of time to fill it (providing they have the inventory), you can order a maximum of 1 week before you run out and if you run out, your pain level will skyrocket within 12-24 hours and you will start going into withdrawls within 24-48 hours.
 

Betterhaff

Well-known member
Veteran
What about all the amphetamines that were/are prescribed? I remember back in the 60’s and 70’s half the neighborhood housewives had a script for pep pills. Then later came the push with treating ADHD.
 

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