Family Members of Those Prescribed Opioids Nearly Three Times More Likely to Overdose

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
October 12, 2019

So does this mean that access to drugs makes someone more likely to use drugs?

But I thought… I thought every man was an island, constantly making his own unique choices about everything he does all the time?

Study Finds:

The opioid epidemic in the United States has become a major health issue. One disturbing statistic for thought: over 42,000 Americans died in 2016 alone due to opioid overdoses, according to the CDC. But, how are so many people getting their hands on these drugs in the first place? It’s all in the family, apparently. A new study reveals that relatives of individuals prescribed an opioid medication are nearly three times more likely to suffer an opioid overdose than others.

Researchers from Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston conclude that access to a family member’s prescription opioids could be a strong risk factor for overdose among people without their own prescriptions.

When prescriptions are filled and there are extra pills in the medicine cabinet, family members with access to those medications could overdose or become dependent,” says lead investigator Joshua Gagne in a media release. “But few studies have systematically examined and quantified this risk.”

The investigators utilized health care data collected by a large U.S. commercial insurance company between 2004-2015. In all, 2,303 people who had overdosed on opioids were matched with 9,212 controls. All studied individuals had never been prescribed opioids by a doctor.

Researchers discovered that a family member on the same insurance plan being prescribed opioids was associated with a 2.89-fold increase in the odds of an individual without a prescription overdosing. Researchers say accounting for age made no difference, both adults and adolescents were more at risk of an overdose if a family member was prescribed opioids.

If access to drugs makes people more likely to use them, and using them is bad, maybe we should try to restrict access?

I mean like, so many of these drugs are coming across the Southern border, right?

Maybe we could, like, restrict border crossings?

Like, maybe we could build some kind of a… like some kind of physical barrier along the border, which stopped people and drugs from coming across?

Seems like a really obvious idea. I’m surprised no politician has ever brought it up.