The Surgeon General just sent this letter on the painkiller overdose crisis to every doctor in America
AP Photo / Charles Dharapak
Virtually, at least. On Thursday, US Surgeon General Vivek Murthy sent this letter to 2.3 million American doctors asking for their help to curb what's being called an "unprecedented" epidemic of opioid painkiller overdose deaths.
It's the first time in history that a Surgeon General has sent a letter directly to American physicians.
This is a major signal to doctors and the public that it's time for something to be done about the thousands of Americans who are dying each year from overdosing on prescription painkillers like oxycodone, fentanyl, and morphine.
Between 2013 and 2014, deaths from synthetic opioids skyrocketed by 79%, according to a new CDC report released Thursday.
Since opioid painkillers slow breathing and act on the same brain systems as heroin, they carry serious risks of overdose and, in rarer cases, addiction. But cases that would normally be rare are happening with increasing regularity as the drugs are being given to so many people. Despite being home to just 5% of the world's population, America consumes 80% of its opioids.
These drugs are powerful. Fentanyl, the drug that killed Prince, is roughly 50 times stronger than pure heroin. And although the deadly drug is legal with a doctor's prescription, it's also being made illegally in underground labs and traded across the US.
Still, doctors' prescriptions are a sizeable part of the problem.
A 2014 report from the American Academy of Neurology estimates that more than 100,000 Americans have died from prescribed opioids since the late 1990s. Those at highest risk include people between 35 and 54, the report found, and deaths from opioids in this age group have exceeded those from firearms and car crashes.
" ... As clinicians, we have the unique power to help end this epidemic," Murthy wrote in his letter.
To make matters worse, the drugs are often prescribed alongside other drugs, like tranquilizers, that can raise the chances of accidental overdose and death. Yet they're often prescribed together anyway.
In 2011, 31% of prescription opioid-related overdose deaths involved these two kinds of drugs used together, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse. "Unfortunately, too many patients are still co-prescribed opioid pain relievers and benzodiazepines [tranquilizers]," the institute said.
Here's the Surgeon General's letter:
US Surgeon General
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