A
Nation Wide Drug Epidemic
An
article printed from the New York Times
offered several stories of people directly impacted by the opioid epidemic from
the eastern parts of our nation to the far west portions. Drugs, more specifically, heroin is coming
across the US border from Mexico. The
cheaply made drug is concealed in vehicle engines, specially made compartments,
suitcases, squeezed into hollowed out fire extinguishers, or strapped to the
person who is trying to cross the border into America. Anything that happens to slip by without
getting caught travels down the highways and interstates to all parts of the
US (Brauner, 2017).
Have
you ever heard of a “pill mill”? I had
not until this article mentioned there are bad doctors who hand prescription
opioids out like candy. Heroin smuggled
into the US is also handed out in these “pill mills”. Drug abuse has reached the point that in
2015, deaths as a result of drug overdose surpassed deaths as a result of gun
violence (Brauner, 2017).
Katie
Harvey, age 24, has been in and out of rehab eight times battling her heroin habit. At this point, she is not shooting up to get
a high. She has to shoot up to avoid
becoming dope sick. Katie went from being
an honor roll student in high school with model worthy features to an anorexic,
alcoholic, who decided to try heroin for the first time at 21. She mentioned she shoots up as many as 15
times a day. Her drugs of choice include
heroin, cocaine, and fentanyl. She has
pawned her mother’s jewelry and had sex with men for money to help support her
drug habit (Brauner, 2017).
In
another story, a man who wished to not be named was trying to get treatment for
his drug addiction that has been a major expense on his life and finances. This was his third time in rehab at just 33
years old. He has a college education and
is the son of two therapists. The young man mentioned he had previously smoked pot,
used ecstasy and cocaine. It was during
his college years someone offered him heroin for the first time. He smoked it once and quickly developed a
habit costing about $20,000 a month to support (Brauner, 2017).
These are just the stories of a couple people directly impacted by the use and abuse of prescription opioids and heroin. I think the author of this article did a great job removing personal bias by providing statistics and addressing that the opioid epidemic affects men and women all across the nation. Allowing them to tell their personal stories about the struggles with opioid abuse makes for a more impacting read.
Reference:
Brauner,
Scott. M. (2017). Inside a killer drug epidemic: a look at America’s opioid
crisis. New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/06/us/opioid-crisis-epidemic.html
It's crazy to see how people try to smuggle drugs into certain areas. Hearing the story about Katie is devastating for here to have to do that. What drugs can do to a person and its addiction is bad and needs to be controlled. All these intelligent people, end up following the wrong path and end up no where.
ReplyDeleteAfter watching a bunch of drug related movies, I am not surprised that people smuggle in as much drugs as they do. For a drug like heroin, people get so addicted to it and then the recovery part is just as hard. People really need to start thinking about their body.
ReplyDelete