Deaths from prescription-opioid overdose have increased dramatically in the United States, quadrupling in the past 15 years. Efforts to improve pain management resulted in quadrupled rates of opioid prescribing, which propelled a tightly correlated epidemic of addiction, overdose, and death from prescription opioids that is now further evolving to include increasing use and overdoses of heroin and illicitly produced fentanyl. The pendulum of opioid use in pain management has swung back and forth several times over the past 100 years. Beginning in the 1990s, efforts to improve treatment of pain failed to adequately take into account opioids' addictiveness, low therapeutic . . .
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Heymann, D. L., Liu, J., & Lillywhite, L. (2016). Partnerships, Not Parachutists, for Zika Research. New England Journal of Medicine, 374(16), 1504–1505. https://doi.org/10.1056/nejmp1602278
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