Monday, July 31, 2017

COMMISSION URGES TRUMP TO DECLARE NATIONAL EMERGENCY

     Since its establishment last March, the White House Commission on the Opioid Crisis has been working on an official report which was sent to President Trump today. The findings were more severe than many originally believed: they were bad enough that the Commission's top recommendation is declare a National Health Emergency.

      Statics from 2016 found that Opioid overdoses kill an average of 91 Americans per day. The Commission found that this number is averaging 142 per day already for 2017. This is over 4,000 casualties per month; and if the current numbers hold, nearly as many Americans this year will die from Opioid Narcosis as were killed during the entirety of the Vietnam War.

      The report also didn't mince words about the culpability of Big Pharma in this epidemic. They noted that Opioid prescription rates and the rates of addiction are directly proportional. Two-thirds of Opioid deaths are from commercially manufactured narcotics--- Fentanyl, Percodan, and Oxycodone---along with the synthetic street-drug Heroin. "We have an enormous problem that is not beginning on street-corners; but often in the doctor's office and hospitals." the report read.

       In its natural state, Opium is not (relatively speaking) an especially dangerous substance. It has strong medicinal properties as a sedative, pain-killer, and curative for respiratory diseases. But when concentrated into these synthetic compounds, it is extremely dangerous.



         One of the reasons that Opioids are particularly prone to causing death by overdose is because they gradually build tolerance while not alleviating the addiction. For example, regular use of Heroin builds a need for stronger and stronger doses with continued use. Opioid addicts will literally go insane if deprived of the drug and will not stop even at murder to obtain it. Last week a doctor in Indiana was gunned down by an addict for refusing to write an Opioid prescription.

         Opioid addiction also causes long-term physical damage, especially to the respiratory and digestive organs. In the latter, internal hemorrhaging is not uncommon. Opioid overdose is not a pleasant way to die. It generally results in pulmonary-respiratory collapse wherein the victim literally suffocates from the inside out. The drug Naloxone is an antidote for Opioid poisoning, and the Commission recommended funding for all EMT units and police departments to have access to it in an emergency.

         The Commission called upon President Trump to declare a national emergency under the Public Health Service Act or the Stafford Act. The former of these was signed into law by President Roosevelt in 1944 and would give the Federal Government greater powers of coordination with states to fight the epidemic. The latter would extend Federal powers to states similar to those in disaster relief situations.

        This is an example of why we really needed to end the rule of the Deep State. Until Trump's Administration, government at every level was in complete denial about this problem. Now it's become a legitimate national crisis. The casualty rate is bad enough; but often what's not told in statistics are the numbers of collateral victims. Thefts and assaults committed to sustain the habit; families hurt by an addicted relative; the taxpayer cost in social welfare programs; diseases spread by addicts' lifestyles; and the general drain of community livability standards---none of this can be calculated.

         But Big Pharma does a lot of calculating---all the way to the bank. And the cash they flood into political campaigns will ensure that Congress will never act. Hence the need for Trump to follow the Commission's recommendation and declare a State of Emergency.







         

2 comments:

  1. Thank God,literally. I'm grateful to President Trump for providing a platform and a willingness to address an epidemic that has been invisible for far too long. Half a million people are now dead and that's only the tip of the ice berg as far as harm goes. It will take many years to recover.

    So far I'm liking this swamp draining thing.

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    1. Yes, it's a national disgrace how this problem has been ignored and even denied by the Bush and Obama Administrations. Since the beginning of the 21st Century, we've had more American deaths---and probably more disabilities---from Opioid abuse alone than we had during World War 2. It's been the tendency of Liberal politicians to deny this is even an issue, but in Liberal-run West Coast cities, it's obvious just from observation.

      DOJ Secretary Sessions and HHS Secretary Price have been working together to stem the flow of Opioids from the medical profession. By the CDC's own admission, 1/3 of known Opioid addictions are through prescription drugs.

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