Everyone should read this. Investigative research that uncovers the culprits behind the opioid epidemic.
Everyone should read this. Investigative research that uncovers the culprits behind the opioid epidemic.
Can anyone spell recipe for disaster? Riveting reading for work. Actually, it‘s not bad but I‘ve got a headache (work related) and am totally over today.
Right after I finished this book, I saw my orthopedist for an ankle injury that isn‘t healing. First thing I said was, “I am not interested in opiates!”
Anyway, this is another well rounded book on the opiate epidemic. There‘s less emphasis on personal stories and more emphasis on corporate/governmental actors. The narrator is excellent! 4.5⭐️
@SW-T Has fantastic suggestions of books about this crisis on her page. 👍🏻📚
More #audiocoloring 😁
This chapter is crazy! 🤯 I haven‘t heard this particular part of the story before. It‘s about IMPACT, a program designed by two (crooked) academic, opinion-leader doctors for drug companies to pay to sit down with the FDA and hand design studies to approve more opioids. 😡😡😡 They used a program called “enriched enrollment” that screened out of studies people likely to become addicts, making FDA approval easier. 😡😡😡
Just started this #audiobook to alternate with The Nix. Idk why I find the opiate epidemic so fascinating, but I guess we all have our things. 🤷🏻♀️
Completed for the “something I saw on Litsy” category in the #nonfiction2019 challenge. Good information about the history of the opioid epidemic in the U.S., but the snarky political asides throughout the book were annoying and distracting. Still recommend, though.
@Riveted_Reader_Melissa
Gigi pictured to offset depressing book feels.
Alright, here we go. This book is incredible. McGreal does a great job of reporting a complex, long-lived public health crisis that we all know of, but probably know very little about. He takes legalities and makes them interesting, enticing. My heart breaks for the victims, it truly is a tragedy. Chris is relatively objective and it's clear to see who is in the wrong, even without the emotion.
My foster got adopted on Saturday and we all miss him a lot, sadly including one of my cats that got used to playing with him 😢
This book is heartbreaking and angering. The way the opioid drug companies allowed so many lives to be destroyed in the name of profit is so sad. A pick, but a hard read. #audiobook
Ugh. So, so depressing, but a good, well-written book. I‘ve read quite a bit about the opioid crisis, but this had plenty of new-to-me (and enraging!) details about its origins. I appreciated the depth of the personal stories of those who‘ve suffered from opioid addiction and their loved ones.
If you want to be infuriated w/pharma comps, the gov, &drs, then read this book. The blatant way they ignore or twist data &warnings &succumb 2 greed is largely the reason there‘s an opioid epidemic in US. Those few doctors who stood up 2 them &pointed out the harm &addictiveness of opioids were quickly dismissed &sometimes had active smear campaigns against them. This book looks largely at the crisis in W. Virginia &takes you to present.
#arc
Any WV Littens planning to see this author speak in Charleston at Taylor Books on Friday evening? I‘m only about a third of the way through the book, but I‘m sure it would be fascinating/infuriating to hear Chris McGreal talk about his research and meetings with the families in the book.
A targeted look at how the US came to consume more than 80% of the world‘s opioid painkillers. In a profit driven health system, making money trumps everything else. Informative, though dry, read. Divided into three sections, the book looks at politicians, pharmaceutical companies, consumers, healthcare, and history. Very briefly touched on race and class in the public shift in perception from punishing deviants to sympathy for addicts.
In trying to combat OxyContin, drugs like heroine and fentanyl flooded the market. As they say, good intentions can often lead to unintended consequences.
If you live in the US there‘s a strong chance you know someone that is or has been addicted to opioids. It‘s been deemed an epidemic, but often the addicted don‘t realize they are addicted until it‘s to late. There‘s a stigma that if the doctor prescribed the medication it must be safe. And that is why I feel this is such an important read. Educate yourself, your friends, your family. Opioids are terrifying stuff.
We celebrate really hard.
Happy New Year friends!
Took a quick lunch break today for this book, coffee, and Bailey pets.
#SundayFunDay @sebrittain
Read more international authors
Balance nonfiction and fiction reads
Enjoy my reading journey
I was riveted by this account of the start and spread of the opioid epidemic and how it has helped fuel the rise of heroin and fentanyl. McGreal deftly deals with the complicated mix of players from the pharma companies to unscrupulous physicians, corrupt police and politicians, and failed government oversight. He highlights the hazards of a government that bends more to corporate interests instead of protecting the public health. 5⭐️
I haven't read Dreamland or Dope Sick yet (on the TBR, I swear) but my first dive into books about the opioid crisis made me Very Angry. All the systems that are supposed to prevent problems like this failed us because Capitalism and Political Lobbying (like, WTF, do people not understand what a Conflict of Interest is???). Also, an extremely concerning disregard of actual science by scientists and physicians.
The misrepresentation of data and lack of scientific rigor behind the drive to change opioid policy in the 1990s is making my hair stand on end.
Documenting the severity of the opioid crisis in southern West Virginia, “American Overdose” highlights the failure of big pharma & the complicity of the FDA in an epidemic that claims more lives than road accidents in the US. A sobering read #opioid #americanoverdose
Starting my first #netgalley read!
I just started another book about the opioid crisis; this is an ARC from NetGalley. Just a little light reading 😕😉 #nonfiction #drugs #opioids #addiction