States
that supported Trump are going to be the hardest hit.
“We
will give people struggling with addiction access to the help they need,”
Donald Trump promised on the campaign
trail in 2016.
We’re
in the midst of the worst opioid epidemic our country has seen.
More people died last year from opioid overdoses than ever before — 33,000.
Opioid abuse now kills more people nationwide than car accidents or gun deaths.
More people died last year from opioid overdoses than ever before — 33,000.
Opioid abuse now kills more people nationwide than car accidents or gun deaths.
The
problem runs most rampant in America’s heartland — in states like Ohio,
Kentucky, and West Virginia. Ohio alone, which gave key electoral votes to
Trump, has three of the top 10 cities with the worst overdose rates in the
country, with Dayton coming in at number one.
So
why is Trump supporting a health care bill that experts have said will only
make our opioid problem worse?
Studies
have shown that a major cause of the opioid problem is patients becoming
addicted to the painkillers their doctors prescribe. Even Trump seems to
understand this.
“We
prescribe opioids like Oxycontin freely,” Trump said in October 2016. “But when
patients become addicted to those drugs, we stop doctors from giving patients
the treatments they medically need.”
And
yet, that’s exactly the problem the new GOP health care bill perpetuates.
The
bill would allow insurance companies to turn away drug users, causing patients
to lose affordable access to lifesaving treatments like Suboxone, Emily
Kaltenbach of the Drug Policy Alliance told Vice.
The
new health care plan would also make doctors more likely to prescribe opioids for
chronic pain, Northeastern University law and health professor Leo Beletsky
says, because their patients won’t be insured for alternative treatment options
like physical therapy.
Republican
senators from Ohio, West Virginia, Arkansas, and Colorado recently released a statement saying they wouldn’t
support any “poorly implemented or poorly timed” change in “access to
life-saving health care services.”
But Trump is pushing for it anyway.
On
the campaign trail, Trump also promised his rural and Appalachian supporters
that he would fight for harsher sentencing for drug dealers.
But piles of evidence
prove that harsher punishment doesn’t stop the flow of drugs into these
vulnerable communities. In fact, it only makes the drug trade more lucrative.
When
all’s said and done, the health care policy that Trump supports could increase the opioid treatment gap —
those who can’t get substance abuse treatment because they can’t afford it or
that care just isn’t available — by 50 percent, according to a Harvard Medical
School and NYU report.
That
would bring the number of people who remain untreated for addiction up to
640,000.
Trump
promised his voters that he would end the opioid epidemic and “make America
safe again.” But it’s those same communities in Ohio, Kentucky, and West
Virginia that trusted the president to make good on those promises who stand to
lose the most.
Domenica
Ghanem is the media manager at the Institute for Policy Studies. Distributed by
OtherWords.org.