Rage Against the System: Opioid Lawsuits, Trump and the UnitedHealthcare Shooting

By Dr. Lynn Webster

In recent years, we’ve witnessed a collective shift in societal attitudes, where deep-seated anger and disillusionment are driving public narratives in unsettling ways.

Three seemingly unrelated phenomena -- the public applause for opioid lawsuit settlements, unwavering support for Donald Trump, and the viral glorification of Luigi Mangione, who allegedly killed the CEO of UnitedHealthcare -- are not as disparate as they first appear.

Together, they reveal a troubling portrait of the undercurrents shaping modern America: a sense of betrayal, unchecked populist rage, and a growing disdain for perceived elites.

The Opioid Crisis

The opioid epidemic has left an indelible scar on American society, and the plethora of lawsuits against pharmaceutical companies like Purdue Pharma, Johnson & Johnson, and others has been widely celebrated.

These legal victories are seen by many as a reckoning for the corporations and individuals who allegedly profited from human suffering. However, beneath this applause lies something darker -- a visceral hatred for systems and figures viewed as complicit in perpetuating a crisis that ruined lives and decimated communities.

While the lawsuits represent an attempt at justice, they have done little to address the underlying anger that millions of Americans feel. Many believe the settlements, while historic, are a drop in the bucket compared to the lives lost and families shattered. This resentment fuels a broader anti-establishment sentiment, one that increasingly targets not only corporations, but anyone perceived to be profiting at the expense of the vulnerable.

The Cult of Trump

Donald Trump’s rise and sustained political influence hinge on a similar anger: a profound distrust of institutions, wokeness, and systems perceived to exploit ordinary Americans.

Trump’s base is galvanized not by policy specifics, but by his ability to channel their rage and direct it at convenient targets -- be it the media, the "deep state," or global corporations. His support thrives on a shared belief that traditional systems, including the government, have failed to protect the American public.

The opioid lawsuits and Trumpism overlap in their shared narrative of betrayal by elites. Whether it’s Big Pharma, corporate executives, or Washington insiders, these movements feed off the same anger -- a belief that the powerful have sacrificed ordinary Americans for profit or political gain.

The Mangione Phenomenon

Enter Luigi Mangione, a name that now reverberates across social media, not because of his actions alone, but because of what he represents in the public imagination.

Allegedly responsible for the murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, Mangione has been transformed into a meme and even a symbol of resistance against perceived corporate exploitation. Viral hashtags, merchandise, and online jokes portray him as a folk hero for those who feel victimized by insurance companies and the broader healthcare system.

What’s striking is not just the speed at which this narrative has developed, but the glee with which Mangione’s alleged crime has been embraced. Social media platforms, awash with memes and satirical merchandise, have turned an act of violence into a rallying cry. This reaction is deeply rooted in the same anger that celebrates opioid lawsuits and supports populist leaders.

UnitedHealthcare, representing an industry notorious for denying claims and driving up costs, has become a symbol of the kind of unchecked corporate power people love to hate. Mangione’s alleged actions, while abhorrent, have been reframed as an act of rebellion against a system that many feel prioritizes profits over people.

What This Reveals About Us

Taken together, these phenomena reflect a society grappling with betrayal, powerlessness, and the long-term consequences of institutional failures. The opioid epidemic, insurance company practices, and political stagnation are all symptoms of systems that millions of Americans believe have failed them. Instead of addressing these issues with nuance or systemic reform, we’ve turned to simplified narratives that vilify individuals and institutions.

The memeification of Mangione, much like the unwavering support for Trump and the uncritical celebration of opioid lawsuit settlements, reveals a deep longing for retribution -- a sense that someone, anyone, must pay for the perceived injustices of modern life. Yet this focus on retribution distracts from meaningful solutions and perpetuates a cycle of outrage and despair.

Moving Forward

The overlapping applause for lawsuits, political populism, and dark memes should serve as a wake-up call. These phenomena highlight not only the anger but also the desperation of a society searching for accountability in all the wrong places.

Addressing these issues requires more than legal settlements, political rhetoric, or viral content; it demands a reimagining of the systems and structures that have allowed such disillusionment to fester.

If we fail to address the root causes of this anger -- systemic inequities, lack of accountability, and the growing divide between the powerful and the powerless -- we risk further polarizing a society already on edge.

We need solutions that offer more than fleeting justice or performative outrage. Only then can we begin to rebuild trust in the institutions that are supposed to serve us all.

Lynn R. Webster, MD, is Senior Fellow at the Center for U.S. Policy (CUSP) and Executive VP Dr. Vince Clinical Research. He also consults with the pharmaceutical industry. Lynn is the author of the award-winning book "The Painful Truth" and co-producer of the documentary "It Hurts Until You Die." You can find him on Bluesky: @butchielyons.bsky.social.

Will Trump Let RFK Jr. ‘Go Wild’ with Public Health?

By Arthur Allen, KFF Health News

Many scientists at the federal health agencies await the second Donald Trump administration with dread as well as uncertainty over how the president-elect will reconcile starkly different philosophies among the leaders of his team.

Trump announced Thursday he’ll nominate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to be secretary of the Health and Human Services Department, after saying during his campaign he’d let the anti-vaccine activist “go wild” on medicines, food, and health.

Should Kennedy win Senate confirmation, his critics say a radical anti-establishment medical movement with roots in past centuries would take power, threatening the achievements of a science-based public health order painstakingly built since World War II.

Trump said in a post on the social platform X that “Americans have been crushed by the industrial food complex and drug companies who have engaged in deception, misinformation, and disinformation when it comes to Public Health,” echoing Kennedy’s complaints about the medical establishment. The former Democratic presidential candidate will “end the Chronic Disease epidemic” and “Make American Great and Healthy Again!” Trump wrote.

Vaccine makers’ stocks dipped Thursday afternoon amid news reports ahead of Trump’s RFK announcement.

If Kennedy makes good on his vision for transforming public health, childhood vaccine mandates could wither. New vaccines might never win approval, even as the FDA allows dangerous or inefficient therapies onto the market. Agency websites could trumpet unproven or debunked health ideas. And if Trump’s plan to weaken civil service rights goes through, anyone who questions these decisions could be summarily fired.

“Never has anybody like RFK Jr. gotten anywhere close to the position he may be in to actually shape policy,” said Lewis Grossman, a law professor at American University and the author of “Choose Your Medicine,” a history of U.S. public health.

Kennedy and an adviser Calley Means, a health care entrepreneur, say dramatic changes are needed because of the high levels of chronic disease in the United States. Government agencies have corruptly tolerated or promoted unhealthy diets and dangerous drugs and vaccines, they say.

Means and Kennedy did not respond to requests for comment. Four conservative members of the first Trump health bureaucracy spoke on condition of anonymity. They eagerly welcomed the former president’s return but voiced few opinions about specific policies. Days after last week’s election, RFK Jr. announced that the Trump administration would immediately fire and replace 600 National Institutes of Health officials. He set up a website seeking crowdsourced nominees for federal appointments, with a host of vaccination foes and chiropractors among the early favorites.

At meetings last week at Mar-a-Lago involving Elon Musk, Tucker Carlson, Donald Trump Jr., Kennedy, and Means, according to Politico, some candidates for leading health posts included Jay Bhattacharya, a Stanford University scientist who opposed covid lockdowns; Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo, who opposes mRNA covid vaccines and rejected well-established disease control practices during a measles outbreak; Johns Hopkins University surgeon Marty Makary; and Means’ sister, Stanford-trained surgeon and health guru Casey Means.

All are mavericks of a sort, though their ideas are not uniform. Yet the notion that they could elbow aside a century of science-based health policy is profoundly troubling to many health professionals. They see Kennedy’s presence at the heart of the Trump transition as a triumph of the “medical freedom” movement, which arose in opposition to the Progressive Era idea that experts should guide health care policy and practices.

It could represent a turning away from the expectation that mainstream doctors be respected for their specialized knowledge, said Howard Markel, an emeritus professor of pediatrics and history at the University of Michigan, who began his clinical career treating AIDS patients and ended it after suffering a yearlong bout of long covid.

“We’ve gone back to the idea of ‘every man his own doctor,’” he said, referring to a phrase that gained currency in the 19th century. It was a bad idea then and it’s even worse now, he said.

“What does that do to the morale of scientists?” Markel asked. The public health agencies, largely a post-WWII legacy, are “remarkable institutions, but you can screw up these systems, not just by defunding them but by deflating the true patriots who work in them.”

FDA Commissioner Robert Califf told a conference on Nov. 12 that he worried about mass firings at the FDA. “I’m biased, but I feel like the FDA is sort of at peak performance right now,” he said. At a conference the next day, CDC Director Mandy Cohen reminded listeners of the horrors of vaccine-preventable diseases like measles and polio. “I don’t want to have to see us go backward in order to remind ourselves that vaccines work,” she said.

Stocks of some the biggest vaccine developers fell after news outlets led by Politico reported that the RFK pick was expected. Moderna, the developer of one of the most popular covid-19 vaccines, closed down 5.6%. Pfizer, another covid vaccine manufacturer, fell 2.6%. GSK, the producer of vaccines protecting against respiratory syncytial virus, hepatitis A and B, rotavirus, and influenza, fell just over 2%. French drug company Sanofi, whose website boasts its products vaccinate over 500 million annually, tumbled nearly 3.5%.

Exodus From Health Agencies?

With uncertainty over the direction of their agencies, many older scientists at the NIH, FDA, and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are considering retirement, said a senior NIH scientist who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of losing his job.

“Everybody I talk to sort of takes a deep breath and says, ‘It doesn’t look good,’” the official said.

“I hear of many people getting CVs ready,” said Arthur Caplan, a professor of bioethics at New York University. They include two of his former students who now work at the FDA, Caplan said.

Others, such as Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Association, have voiced wait-and-see attitudes. “We worked with the Trump administration last time. There were times things worked reasonably well,” he said, “and times when things were chaotic, particularly during covid.” Any wholesale deregulation efforts in public health would be politically risky for Trump, he said, because when administrations “screw things up, people get sick and die.”

At the FDA, at least, “it’s very hard to make seismic changes,” former FDA chief counsel Dan Troy said.

But the administration could score easy libertarian-tinged wins by, for example, telling its new FDA chief to reverse the agency’s refusal to approve the psychedelic drug MDMA from the company Lykos. Access to psychedelics to treat post-traumatic stress disorder has grabbed the interest of many veterans. Vitamins and supplements, already only lightly regulated, will probably get even more of a free pass from the next Trump FDA.

Medical Freedom’ vs ‘Nanny State

Trump’s health influencers are not monolithic. Analysts see potential clashes among Kennedy, Musk, and more traditional GOP voices. Casey Means, a “holistic” MD at the center of Kennedy’s “Make America Healthy Again” team, calls for the government to cut ties with industry and remove sugar, processed food, and toxic substances from American diets. Republicans lampooned such policies as exemplifying a “nanny state” when Mike Bloomberg promoted them as mayor of New York City.

Both the libertarian and “medical freedom” wings oppose aspects of regulation, but Silicon Valley biotech supporters of Trump, like Samuel Hammond of the Foundation for American Innovation, have pressed the agency to speed drug and device approvals, while Kennedy’s team says the FDA and other agencies have been “captured” by industry, resulting in dangerous and unnecessary drugs, vaccines, and devices on the market.

Kennedy and Casey Means want to end industry user fees that pay for drug and device rules and support nearly half the FDA’s $7.2 billion budget. It’s unclear whether Congress would make up the shortfall at a time when Trump and Musk have vowed to slash government programs. User fees are set by laws Congress passes every five years, most recently in 2022.

The industry supports the user-fee system, which bolsters FDA staffing and speeds product approvals. Writing new rules “requires an enormous amount of time, effort, energy, and collaboration” by FDA staff, Troy said. Policy changes made through informal “guidance” alone are not binding, he added.

Kennedy and the Means siblings have suggested overhauling agricultural policies so that they incentivize the cultivation of organic vegetables instead of industrial corn and soy, but “I don’t think they’ll be very influential in that area,” Caplan said. “Big Ag is a powerful entrenched industry, and they aren’t interested in changing.”

“There’s a fine line between the libertarian impulse of the ‘medical freedom’ types and advocating a reformation of American bodies, which is definitely ‘nanny state’ territory,” said historian Robert Johnston of the University of Illinois-Chicago.

Specific federal agencies are likely to face major changes. Republicans want to trim the NIH’s 27 research institutes and centers to 15, slashing Anthony Fauci’s legacy by splitting the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, which he led for 38 years, into two or three pieces.

Numerous past attempts to slim down the NIH have failed in the face of campaigns by patients, researchers, and doctors. GOP lawmakers have advocated substantial cuts to the CDC budget in recent years, including an end to funding gun violence, climate change, and health equity research. If carried out, Project 2025, a policy blueprint from the conservative Heritage Foundation, would divide the agency into data-collecting and health-promoting arms. The CDC has limited clout in Washington, although former CDC directors and public health officials are defending its value.

“It would be surprising if CDC wasn’t on the radar” for potential change, said Anne Schuchat, a former principal deputy director of the agency, who retired in 2021.

The CDC’s workforce is “very employable” and might start to look for other work if “their area of focus is going to be either cut or changed,” she said.

‘It Won’t Be Harmless’

Kennedy’s attacks on HHS and its agencies as corrupted tools of the drug industry, and his demands that the FDA allow access to scientifically controversial drugs, are closely reminiscent of the 1970s campaign by conservative champions of Laetrile, a dangerous and ineffective apricot-pit derivative touted as a cancer treatment.

Just as Kennedy championed off-patent drugs like ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine to treat covid, Laetrile’s defenders claimed that the FDA and a profit-seeking industry were conspiring to suppress a cheaper alternative.

The public and industry have often been skeptical of health regulatory agencies over the decades, Grossman said. The agencies succeed best when they are called in to fix things — particularly after bad medicine kills or damages children, he said.

The 1902 Biologics Control Act, which created the NIH’s forerunner, was enacted in response to smallpox vaccine contamination that killed at least nine children in Camden, New Jersey. Child poisonings linked to the antifreeze solvent for a sulfa drug prompted the modern FDA’s creation in 1938. The agency, in 1962, acquired the power to demand evidence of safety and efficacy before the marketing of drugs after the thalidomide disaster, in which children of pregnant women taking the anti-nausea drug were born with terribly malformed limbs.

If vaccination rates plummet and measles and whooping cough outbreaks proliferate, babies could die or suffer brain damage.

“It won’t be harmless for the administration to broadly attack public health,” said Alfredo Morabia, a professor of epidemiology at Columbia University and the editor-in-chief of the American Journal of Public Health. “It would be like taking away your house insurance.”

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues.

Controversy Grows Over Trump's Use of Hydroxychloroquine

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

President Trump on Tuesday defended his use of hydroxychloroquine (Plaquenil) as a preventative treatment for COVID-19, even though there is only anecdotal evidence the drug may work against the virus and it may be harmful to some patients. Hydroxychloroquine has been linked to at least 48 deaths in the U.S. so far this year, according to an FDA database.

The president first disclosed his use of hydroxychloquine on Monday, claiming that White House physician Sean Conley said it was okay for him to take the drug.

“I asked him, ‘What do you think?’ He said, ‘Well, if you’d like it.’ I said, ‘Yeah, I’d like it. I’d like to take it,’” Trump said.

Dr. Conley confirmed that account in a statement.

“After numerous discussions (Trump) and I had regarding the evidence for and against the use of hydroxychloroquine, we concluded the potential benefit from treatment outweighed the relative risk," Conley said.

The Food and Drug Administration has only approved hydroxychloquine for the treatment of malaria, lupus and rheumatoid arthritis. However, nothing prevents a doctor from prescribing a drug "off-label" to treat another condition.

In recent months, Trump has touted hydroxychloquine as a possible "game changer" in the treatment of COVID-19. He said he started taking the drug as a preventative measure a week and a half ago, at about the same time two White House staff members tested positive for coronavirus.

“I’m not going to get hurt by it. It’s been around for 40 years,” Trump said. “For malaria, for lupus, for other things. I take it. Front-line workers take it. A lot of doctors take it."

Last month, the FDA warned against using hydroxychloroquine as a treatment for COVID-19 outside of a hospital or clinical study because of “serious and potentially life-threatening heart rhythm problems.” Patients with heart and kidney disease are especially at risk, the agency said.

The FDA's Adverse Events Reporting System lists over 10,000 reported cases involving hydroxychloroquine in the past decade, most of them serious, life threatening or resulting in hospitalizations. Nearly 600 people have died since 2010, including 48 deaths so far this year.

The number of adverse events involving hydroxychloroquine has soared in recent years, from less than a hundred cases in 2010 to over 4,500 in 2019

SOURCE: FDA ADVERSE EVENTS REPORTING SYSTEM

SOURCE: FDA ADVERSE EVENTS REPORTING SYSTEM

'Reckless Action'

"President Trump’s use of hydroxychloroquine to prevent Covid-19 infection without any clinical evidence of its utility is dangerous and will cause untoward toxicities, likely including death, in some people following his lead," Dr. Michael Polis, a fellow at the Infectious Diseases Society of America, told The New York Times.

"He needs to be strongly criticized by the medical community for this reckless action."

A recent study funded by the National Institutes of Health looked at patients at VA hospitals who were given hydroxychloroquine to treat COVID-19. They concluded the drug was ineffective and raised the risk of patients dying.

“In this study, we found no evidence that use of hydroxychloroquine, either with or without azithromycin, reduced the risk of mechanical ventilation in patients hospitalized with Covid-19. An association of increased overall mortality was identified in patients treated with hydroxychloroquine alone. These findings highlight the importance of awaiting the results of ongoing prospective, randomized, controlled studies before widespread adoption of these drugs,” researchers found.

Trump dismissed the research as a "phony study" by his political enemies.

“There was a false study done where they gave it to very sick people, extremely sick people, people that were ready to die,” he said Tuesday. “It was given by obviously not friends of the administration.” 

Several patients who are prescribed hydroxychloroquine for rheumatoid arthritis or lupus have told PNN they are worried about possible shortages due to Trump's touting of the drug.

“I have been on hydroxychloroquine for five years for my autoimmune disease and had never had an issue getting the medication until the virus. In March, I had to check 3 different pharmacies before I found one that had any in stock,” one patient said. “My usual pharmacy said that not a single one of their local chains had it in stock and that they were back-ordered. The pharmacy that did have it, was only able to do a partial refill.” 

“I am currently on Plaquenil for lupus and having Trump declare it is the cure for COVID-19 has limited my access to my medication. I am worried there won’t be enough,” another patient said.  

“I am in a horrible RA flare at this moment. I have no doubt that the stress of being concerned about getting my needed medication has helped to bring this flare on," said another. "I am really concerned about being able to get my much-needed hydroxychloroquine. There is no reasonable explanation for drug shortages in this country other than ignorance.” 

Former Vice-President Joe Biden said Trump was “absolutely irresponsible” for taking hydroxychloroquine, which could encourage others to take it to prevent COVID-19 infections.

"It's like saying maybe if you injected Clorox into your blood, maybe it'll cure you. What is he doing? What in God's name is he doing?" said the presumptive Democratic 2020 nominee. “Look, this is absolutely irresponsible. There's no serious medical personnel out there saying to use that drug. It's counterproductive. It's not going to help."

Pain Patients Give Trump Poor Ratings for Handling of Coronavirus

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

Is it time for the coronavirus lockdown to end? Should states, schools and non-essential businesses re-open? Like everything else in a sharply divided nation, the answers to those questions are often riven with politics, misinformation and distrust.

“The president is wrong about opening up our economy! Yes, it has to be done but it's way too soon, the active cases and deaths are steadily going up and he wants to throw people out into public? It's not the right time and he is fixing to kill a lot more people,” one person told us.

“They are in too big of a hurry to re-open everything and we will all suffer for that decision. My wife is an essential worker and I worry a great deal for her,” said another.

“I'm stunned how much of this country is not taking this seriously, from the top down. I am 59 years old, and extremely ill already from chronic Lyme and many co-infections. I am terrified of this virus because I am sure I will die from it,” one patient said.

Those are some of the responses we received from over 1,700 people in the United States to our coronavirus survey. The online survey was conducted April 6-20 by Pain News Network, the International Pain Foundation and the Chronic Pain Association of Canada from April 6-20. Over 2,200 people responded worldwide, the largest survey of its kind.

‘The Country is Overreacting’

All of the respondents indicated they have chronic pain or chronic illness. Many are also elderly and have compromised immune systems, which puts them at higher risk of severe symptoms and death if they become infected with COVID-19. Like many healthcare workers, many are still unable to get simple protective gear such as face masks.

If you think that would make everyone cautious about reopening the U.S. economy, you’d be wrong.

“The country is overreacting, and this is going to destroy this country financially and make it difficult to continue to get good healthcare if providers go bankrupt,” one person told us.

“People have to go back to work, life will be worse off if people lose their jobs,” said another.

“I think for the most part it is overblown and they are inflating the numbers on purpose. We should be opening businesses on a slow but steady basis, not based on the governors’ poll numbers,” another person said.

Asked how they would rate the U.S. federal government’s response to the coronavirus, over 55% rated it poor or very poor, while only 29% said it was good or very good.

How Would You Rate the U.S. Federal Government's Response to Coronavirus?

That dim assessment by U.S. residents is in marked contrast to how residents of other English speaking countries view their governments’ response to the pandemic.

Although the number of survey respondents in Canada (391), United Kingdom (51) and Australia (26) is far less than our U.S. sample — and not as meaningful statistically — they are much more likely to have a positive rating for their own governments. Canada’s response to the pandemic was rated good or very good by 55% of Canadians.

Governments Rated "Good" or "Very Good" for Coronavirus Response

State and Local Governments Rated Better

In contrast to the federal response, chronic pain patients in the U.S. have more favorable opinions about how their state and local governments are handling the pandemic. Nearly 48% said the response was good or very good, compared to 27% who rated it poor or very poor.

How Would Rate Your State or Local Governments' Response?

“It stuns me, the level of gross incompetence and general apathy of the federal government toward average Americans. Thank God for independent governors,” one person said.

“Trump and his administration have failed this country in every possible way. They wasted months of time they should have been preparing,” said another.

“The lack of preparation is disheartening! I know that these plans were available when this administration got into office and then all that went right out the window. This lead to many unnecessary deaths while they screamed it was nothing but a Democratic hoax,” wrote another patient.

“If our federal government was on top of this, we wouldn’t have as many people dying around the country. If we had Medicare for All, then we would have an adequate supply of PPE. My state governor did a good job of early lockdown, but the local response and local people did not,” said another.

“We have all been left to die of COVID-19 because the current administration refused to step up and behave like real leaders should. And I believe that many lives could have been saved had Trump done his job in the earlier months instead of lying about it and pretending it didn't exist,” another patient wrote.

“While bad, the media has once again blown it out of proportion. Another attempt to discredit our president. This year’s flu has killed more!” said a Trump supporter.

“Thank goodness Trump cut off flights to China when he did! Good job POTUS,” said another.

Conspiracy Theories

We didn’t ask people what they thought was the source of the virus, but many offered an opinion anyway. Some believe the coronavirus was engineered in a laboratory or is part of a larger conspiracy.

“The Wuhan Chinese worldwide pandemic is germ warfare started by China for economic reasons,” one patient said.

“I personally really believe that this pandemic was deliberately done by the government of China to bring the U.S., Canada, and other strategic countries down for a very easy takeover. I also believe that the Chinese already have the vaccine for this virus,” said another.

“I fear that this outbreak is being used as a way to destroy the American Constitution and Bill of Rights and allow the government to take over every aspect of our lives. I fear that people, in their terror, will allow the government to do anything it wants,” another patient warned.

“I strongly believe and feel that there is something much more sinister going on behind the scenes that is able to be carried out freely while everyone is shut/locked away in their homes,” warned another patient. “I just really believe that this is the absolute best scenario for them to setup extensive 5G systems networks. And there's got to be something else that they are planning for a new regime of control, greed and power over the world.”

“Conspiracy type stuff is intriguing but detrimental to my health. I've stopped exposing myself to it as well as to most news,” said another patient.

“I don't know what or who to believe!” was the opinion shared by several people.

And so it goes. Thanks to everyone who participated in our survey. If you’d like to see some of the other survey findings, click here. Stay safe and be kind to one another.

Did Chronic Pain Patients Help Elect President Trump?

By Pat Anson, Editor

Rates of opioid prescribing were significantly higher in counties that voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election, according to a new analysis published in JAMA Network Open.

Researchers at the University of Texas compared voting trends, census information and Medicare data for people who received opioid prescriptions for 90 days or more. Nearly 60 percent of U.S. counties that voted for Trump had an above average opioid prescribing rate in 2015. Counties with below average prescribing rates voted for Trump only 39 percent of the time.

The researchers cautioned that the study does not mean that chronic pain patients were more likely to vote for Trump. It’s more likely to indicate that economic, health and social problems that lead to opioid use – sometimes called the "epidemic of despair" -- played a role in Trump’s victory.

“Support for the Republican candidate in the 2016 election is a marker for physical conditions, economic circumstances, and cultural forces associated with opioid use,” wrote lead author Dr. James Goodwin, chair of geriatric medicine at the UT Medical Branch in Galveston. “This association is related to underlying county socioeconomic characteristics that are common to both chronic opioid use and voting patterns, particularly characteristics pertaining to income, disability, insurance coverage, and unemployment.”

The researchers created a map (above) showing counties with the highest rates of opioid prescribing in dark red, while a second map (below) shows counties that overwhelmingly voted for Trump in dark red. 

The maps have similarities, but they don’t align perfectly or prove a cause and effect relationship between prescribing and voting. For example, while Trump won unexpected victories in Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, where opioid prescribing is high, he also won in North and South Dakota, where prescribing rates are relatively low. 

During the 2016 presidential campaign, Trump and Hillary Clinton both called for further restrictions on opioid prescriptions and expanded access to addiction treatment. Clinton also endorsed a proposed tax on opioid pain medication.

“Given that both candidates focused on opiate addiction as a major campaign issue, it is difficult to infer that opiate prescription rates are somehow linked with voting behavior based on the candidates’ respective campaign promises and/or platforms,” wrote James Rosenquist, MD, in an editorial also published in JAMA Open Network.

“These limitations aside, this article’s findings add to a growing body of literature showing the interrelationship between public health and society, including the all-important economic and political realms.”

The “epidemic of despair” was first documented by Princeton researchers Anne Case and Angus Deaton in 2015.  They believe that the reduced life expectancy of middle-aged white Americans is linked to substance abuse, unemployment, poor finances, lack of education, divorce, depression and loss of social connections.

"People who reach for an opioid might also reach for ... near-term fixes," Nancy Morden, PhD, a professor at the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, told NPR. "I think that Donald Trump's campaign was a promise for near-term relief."

Trump Calls for More Cuts in Opioid Prescriptions

By Pat Anson, Editor

President Trump is calling for further reductions in the prescribing of opioid pain medication and for some drug dealers to get the death penalty.

In a speech in Manchester, New Hampshire, a state hit hard by the overdose epidemic, Trump outlined his plan to combat the nation’s opioid and addiction crisis by cracking down on drug dealers, opioid manufacturers and doctors who overprescribe pain medication.

“We’re going to cut nationwide opioid prescriptions by one third over the next three years,” Trump said. “We’re also going to make sure that virtually all prescriptions reimbursed by the federal government follow best practices for prescribing. We’ll ensure that opioid addiction is not subsidized by the American taxpayer. The best way to beat the drug crisis is to keep people from getting hooked on drugs to begin with.”

The president did not spell out precisely how opioid prescribing would be reduced. His administration has proposed new rules that would make it harder for Medicare beneficiaries to obtain high doses of opioid medication by rigidly adhering to the CDC’s voluntary opioid prescribing guidelines. Under the Medicare plan, insurers could refuse to pay for opioid prescriptions that exceed the dose levels recommended by the CDC.

Opioid prescriptions peaked in 2010 and the Drug Enforcement Administration has cut opioid production quotas nearly in half over the last two years – which has led to shortages of pain medication at some hospitals and hospices.  

The president also said the nation “must get tough” with high volume drug traffickers.

“The ultimate penalty has to be the death penalty,” Trump said. “Drug traffickers kills so many thousands of our citizens every year and that’s why my Department of Justice will be seeking much tougher penalties than we’ve ever had. And we will be focusing on the penalty that we talked about previously for the big pushers, the ones that are really killing so many people.

"Whether you are a dealer or doctor or trafficker or a manufacturer, if you break the law and illegally peddle these deadly poisons, we will find you, we will arrest you, and we will hold you accountable."

Trump said tougher border security was needed to stop the flow of illegal drugs and called for an nationwide advertising campaign to encourage children to avoid drug use.

“Spending a lot of money on great commercials showing how bad it is,” he said.

Last October, the president declared the opioid crisis a public health emergency, a designation that stopped short of the national state of emergency sought by his opioid commission. Critics have said the Trump administration has done little to fund or execute a coherent strategy to combat the overdose problem. 

Can Kellyanne Conway Solve the Opioid Crisis?

By Mark Maginn, Columnist

U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced last week that White House counselor Kellyanne Conway has been appointed to lead initiatives in the Trump Administration against the opioid crisis currently sweeping the country.

That’s right, President Trump’s former campaign manager and spinner of alternative facts has become the new “opioid czar” – although she is generally thought of inside and outside of the Washington beltway as someone as little acquainted with facts as her employer. 

Appointing a political shill who cares nothing about facts to such a high profile position strains credulity and places millions of pain sufferers and their doctors in jeopardy of more harassment and arrests.

KELLYANNE CONWAY (GAGE SKIDMORE PHOTO)

Ms. Conway is a professional resident of what candidate Trump called the “swamp” he pledged to drain. And now this denizen of the Capital’s reptilian power structure is to be in charge of initiatives alleviating the opioid epidemic. 

This is a position that requires the ability to gather experts together in order to devise wise and humane policies to help those in terrible pain and those who become addicted to opioid drugs such as OxyContin and, of course, heroin.

To add gravitas to the strained credulity of this outrageous appointment, we have none other than “opioid policy expert” and the founder of Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing (PROP) weighing in.

"It is a positive sign. She is a high-profile figure in the administration, showing the administration takes this seriously,” Dr. Andrew Kolodny told BuzzFeed.

It appears that in Kolodny’s brand of myopia, possessing a “high-profile” is evidence of seriousness. Kolodny perpetuates the notion that notoriety equals intellect, organizational ability and tact.

Those who applaud this sad appointment apparently do not take this so-called opioid epidemic with anything approaching the seriousness it requires. Conway’s appointment will likely lead to more of the same stupid drug policy of harassing pain doctors and jailing patients desperate for pain relief. No serious policies can be expected.

For example, after nearly a year in office, the Trump administration has failed to name anyone to head the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy. It also has yet to fund or propose a strategy for the overdose crisis, which President Trump declared a public health emergency in October. Does this look like an administration serious about the causes and treatment of drug addiction and drug overdose deaths?

Conway’s lack of candor and veracity is likely to lead to disastrous policies affecting millions of us. 

She infamously coined the phrase “alternative facts” in defense of then-Press Secretary Sean Spicer’s false statements about the size of the crowd at Trump’s inauguration. Conway later defended the President’s travel ban on mostly Muslim countries by making reference to the “Bowling Green Massacre.” She cited this fictitious terrorist massacre as evidence in support of the president’s travel ban on Muslims. 

The use of lies and half-truths by Conway should have been enough to disqualify her.

Can we believe that Conway will look to the ravages of poverty, the destruction of good middle class jobs, the collapse of education, the increasing wealth gap, and the epidemic of loneliness that I see in my office daily with patients suffering from various forms of depression and despair? No, certainly not. That would require long term financial commitment to jobs, healthcare, education, and housing.

Our current War on Drugs has led to the incarceration of millions of Americans of color. We now have more of our citizens in prison than any other nation. Yet Attorney General Sessions has created a new unit in the DEA that is solely charged with “investigating and prosecuting health care fraud related to prescription opioids.”

This indicates more law enforcement and pressure on doctors prescribing opioids for those of us who depend on these medicines simply to live. That is exactly the wrong policy. 

People of privilege like Ms. Conway and her boss, our President, are not capable of looking beyond their own wealthy horizons and seeing the lonely precincts of a depressed and despairing nation.

We need real, clear-eyed and honest people to bring us real, clear-eyed and honest help.

Mark Maginn lives with chronic back pain. He is a licensed mental health and social worker who spent 18 months working in New York City with survivors of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Mark now has a private practice in psychotherapy in Chicago, where he specializes in working with people in intractable pain. 

The information in this column should not be considered as professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. It is for informational purposes only and represents the author’s opinions alone. It does not inherently express or reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of Pain News Network.

China Denies Responsiblity for Fentanyl Crisis

By Pat Anson, Editor

China is disputing claims that most of the illicit fentanyl and related chemicals that are being smuggled into the U.S. and killing thousand of Americans originated in China. President Trump has said he would ask Chinese President Xi Jinping to “hold back the flood of cheap and deadly fentanyl” when he visits Beijing this week.

Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine. It is prescribed legally to treat severe pain, but illicit fentanyl and its chemical analogues have become a scourge on the black market, where they are often mixed with heroin or turned into counterfeit prescription drugs.

“The evidence isn't sufficient to say that the majority of fentanyl or other new psychoactive substances come from China," said Wei Xiaojun, deputy director-general of China’s Narcotics Control Bureau of the Ministry of Public Security.

Wei spoke at a joint news conference Friday with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. China and the DEA have stepped up their cooperation on drug control problems in recent months, with Beijing putting dozens of fentanyl related chemicals on its list of controlled substances.

“Once China controls a substance it has a dramatic effect on the United States in terms of lives saved,” said Lance Ho, who heads a new DEA office in Beijing.

DEA PHOTO OF counterfeit FENTANYL PILLS

"We did this even when there is no widespread fentanyl abuse in China," Wei said. "We were aware of the crisis in the U.S. and took the U.S. concern into consideration."

But an editorial in a Korean newspaper disputed the level of Chinese cooperation, claiming that China was using fentanyl in a “chemical war” against the U.S.

“Fentanyl is the nuclear narcotic that is killing thousands of Americans today and another example of China’s two-faced approach. The chemical, known as ‘China Girl’ or ‘China White’ on the street, may have some Chinese victims, but its true value is as a profitable opiate export that also destroys American communities and roils the U.S. political landscape,” said The Korea Herald. 

“Drug exports have allowed for the establishment of new Chinese-run drug cartels and distributors within the United States while untimely and tragic American deaths are recorded daily.”

According to the CDC, illicit fentanyl killed 20,000 Americans in 2016. A recent CDC study found that over half the opioid overdoses in ten states involved fentanyl.

Son of Fox News Anchor Overdosed on Fentanyl

The son of a former Fox News anchor overdosed and died after taking counterfeit prescription drugs made with fentanyl, according to reports.

19-year old Eric Bolling Jr. was found dead in his Boulder, Colorado apartment September 3. He is the son of Eric Bolling, who was recently fired by Fox News for allegedly sending lewd texts to several women.

The Boulder County coroner recently reported the younger Bolling had high levels of fentanyl, cocaine, marijuana and the anti-anxiety drug Xanax in his system when he died.

According to police, Bolling and a friend had gone to Denver the day before his death to buy cocaine and other drugs. They bought five pills that appeared to look like Percocet, a branded version of the painkiller oxycodone. Bolling, who had a history of drug abuse, took one of the pills and quickly realized it wasn’t Percocet.

ERIC BOLLING AND SON ERIC JR.

“Eric took half of a percocet and the cocaine dealer took half of a percocet. Within a few minutes Eric and the percocet dealer started ‘panicking’ because they had a different reaction to the percocet than they normally do. Eric made the comment that he thought the percocet may have contained fentanyl,” investigators said in a police report obtained by TheBlast.com.

Bolling’s body was found by a girlfriend the next day. His death has been ruled accidental.

The DEA recently added three more fentanyl analogues -- ortho-fluorofentanyl, tetrahydrofuranyl fentanyl, and methoxyacetyl fentanyl  -- to its list of Schedule I Controlled Substances, chemicals that are considered highly dangerous and addictive.

At least 17 confirmed overdose deaths have been linked to the three drugs in Georgia, North Carolina, Texas, New Jersey, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania. The drugs have also been found in California, Florida, Ohio and Missouri.

The Justice Department recently indicted two major Chinese drug traffickers accused of manufacturing fentanyl in drug labs in China and selling it to U.S. customers over the Internet.

Trump Commission Seeks More Limits on Rx Opioids

By Pat Anson, Editor

President Trump’s opioid commission released its final report Wednesday, an ambitious list of over four dozen recommendations aimed at treating addiction, preventing overdoses, and further restrictions on opioid prescribing.   

“This crisis can be fought with effective medical education, voluntary or involuntary changes in prescribing practices, and a strong regulatory and enforcement environment,” the commission said in its report.

The president established the commission in March to give him a list of recommendations to combat drug addiction and the overdose crisis. 

“Our people are dying. One hundred seventy-five people a day, every day, are dying in the United States from this epidemic,” said commission chairman Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey, one of five politicians who served on the six member panel.

“If a terrorist organization was killing 175 Americans every day on American soil, what would you be willing to pay to make it stop? I think we’d be willing to do anything and everything to make it stop. And that’s the way we now need to see this, because this is an attack from within. We are killing ourselves.”

The commission’s 131-page report did not spell out how much money would be needed to implement the panel’s wish list of 56 recommendations.

Chief among them was to get drug makers and the National Institutes of Health to work together developing new non-opioid painkillers and addiction treatment medications.

“It is inexcusable that the major pharmaceutical companies in this country have stood on the sidelines during this crisis. And they have,” said Christie.

New Prescribing Guideline to Supplement CDC's

The commission is also recommending that a new set of guidelines for opioid prescribing be developed to “supplement” the guideline released last year by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.  It was not immediately clear if the new guidelines would replace, weaken or strengthen the CDC’s recommendations, or simply expand their use throughout the healthcare system.

“An updated set of guidelines for prescription pain medications should be established by an expert committee composed of various specialty practices to supplement the CDC guideline that are specifically targeted to primary care physicians,” the report says.

The commission recommended that federal regulators require patients to give informed consent about the risks and alternatives to opioid painkillers before the medication is prescribed to them. The panel also called for a new “national curriculum and standard of care” for opioid prescribers, and that pharmacists be trained to recognize and deny “inappropriate prescriptions.”

The commission urged the federal government to work with states to improve the toxicology data on overdose deaths by developing uniform forensic drug testing. Critics say the current data now being used by federal agencies is flawed or cherry-picked. 

“We do not have sufficiently accurate and systematic data from medical examiners around the country to determine overdose deaths, both in their cause and the actual number of deaths,” the report says.

No Limit on Opioid Supply for Acute Pain

The commission did not recommend that supply limits be placed on opioid prescriptions for short term pain, as many expected. Several states have already enacted 5 or 7-day limits on opioids for acute pain. The panel also did not endorse the development of marijuana-based medications, which many pain sufferers are now using as an alternative to opioids.

Most of the commission’s other recommendations deal with cracking down on drug traffickers and the illicit drug market, expanding the drug court system, and increasing access to addiction treatment.

Gov. Christie refuted criticism of President Trump for declaring the overdose crisis a public health emergency, instead of a national emergency. Only $57,000 in federal funding is currently set aside to deal with a public health emergency.

“The president did exactly what I asked him to. I wanted this to be a public health emergency because I wanted HHS (Department of Health and Human Services) to administer the funds, not FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency). No offense to FEMA. They’re busy with some other things and it’s not there area of expertise,” Christie said.

“Now it’s incumbent upon Congress to step up and put money in the public health emergency fund, so the president can utilize that. And that should happen without delay in the view of the commission.”

In addition to Christie, commission members include Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts, Gov. Roy Cooper of North Carolina, Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi, Bertha Madras, PhD, a professor of psychobiology at Harvard Medical School, and Patrick Kennedy, a former Rhode Island congressman.

In its fifth and final hearing, the commission heard testimony from several people who lost loved ones to opioid addiction and overdose. The panel never asked for or received testimony from pain sufferers, patient advocates or pain management physicians.

Insurers Promise More Cuts in Rx Opioids

By Pat Anson, Editor

Less than two weeks before its final report is due, President Trump’s opioid commission held its fourth and final public meeting Friday – hearing testimony from top government officials and insurance industry executives about the nation’s worsening overdose crisis.

“Insurance companies are going to be a very, very important part of whether we will be able to stem the tide here or whether we’re not,” said commission chairman Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey.

It was clear from their testimony that many insurers are planning to tighten access to prescription opioids even more than they already have.

Aetna’s chief medical officer told the commission the insurance giant was planning to reduce “inappropriate opioid prescribing” to its members by 50 percent within the next five years.  He did not explain what would be considered inappropriate.

Aetna has already sent warning letters to hundreds of physicians and dentists identified as “super-prescribers,” urging them to reduce the number of opioid prescriptions they write.

“We’re now re-running our analysis and planning more aggressive interventions for those providers who haven’t improved their opioid prescribing habits over the past several months,” said Harold Paz, MD.  

The chief medical officer of Cigna said his company was close to achieving a 25 percent reduction in coverage of opioid prescriptions, a priority it set last year.

“That’s only the first of our goals,” said Alan Muney, MD.

Insurer Harvard Pilgrim said its coverage of opioid prescriptions has declined by over 20 percent since 2014.

“That’s not enough.  This feels like a balloon where you tap on one end and it comes out somewhere else. So it doesn’t mean we’re even close to solving this,” said Michael Sherman, MD, chief medical officer of Harvard Pilgrim.

Insurers clearly have the ear of the federal government when it comes to opioids. As PNN has reported, an obscure federal advisory group composed of insurers, law enforcement, and federal and state regulators has discussed eliminating opioid prescriptions for acute pain, as well as paying doctors not to prescribe opioids.

The Healthcare Fraud Prevention Partnership also wants access to the “personally identifiable and protected health information” of 57 million Medicare beneficiaries to see if they are abusing opioids.

Reducing Opioids a ‘Win-Win’

Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta said reducing opioid prescriptions was important to get unemployed Americans back into the workforce. He cited a recent study that found that about a third of unemployed men aged 25 to 54 were using prescription painkillers.   

“Reducing the amount of opioids is a win-win across the board. It’s a win for the individual who doesn’t want to get hooked,” Acosta said. “It’s a win for the insurance companies who don’t want to be paying for medicines that people don’t need. And it’s a win for the American workforce, because if we can get people back to work and paying taxes and participating fully, that’s a win for them and it’s a win for the country.”

Acosta cited no studies that might indicate how many Americans currently taking opioids would become unemployed or disabled if their pain medication was reduced or taken away. 

No pain patients, patient advocates or experts in pain management were asked to appear before the commission. No one from the pain community has testified during any of the commission’s public meetings, although thousands have submitted written comments.

An interim report released by the opioid commission in July focused on expanding access to addiction treatment and developing new ways of treating pain without opioids. Since then, the commission has increasingly focused on limiting opioid prescriptions. The final report from the commission is expected November 1.

The interim report also strongly urged President Trump to declare a national emergency to speed up efforts to combat the overdose crisis, something he has yet to do.  “We’re going to be doing it in the next week,” Trump told reporters on Monday.  However, there appears to be little consensus in the administration about what actions to take after an emergency is declared or how to pay for them.

"Everyone wants opioids to be a priority, but there's a lot of resistance to calling it an emergency," a senior administration official told Politico.