Thecoffeecake
New member
The level of addiction to opioid painkillers in the US is quite staggering compared to here. Much of that comes down to the way the health system operates I think. Here, you're registered with a GP, and if they prescribe you medication, any other doctor you go to will be able to see that, and won't give you more until you've legitimately used the first lot. The US system seems to make it easy to go to a physician, request said painkillers (and am I right in thinking doctors are incentivised by the pharmaceutical companies to promote their drugs??), and then pop into another practice and order more.
Clearly there are people addicted to opiate painkillers in the UK, but I believe relative levels are much lower than in the States. Must cost people an absolute fortune to keep buying them all??
Our healthcare system is unabashedly controlled by the dollar, and the powerful healthcare and insurance lobbies keep it that way. Doctors absolutely write prescriptions for drugs by companies that send them and their families on month long vacations, and loads of other incentives I don't care to find out about. Painkillers do get too expensive, and that's when addicts turn to heroin, which, rumor had it in my hometown, cost as low $3 a bag at one point. Everyone knows what heroin does, and most people aren't sticking a needle in their arm day one.
Mind you, this is a country where the narrative has been manipulated to state single payer health care is too expensive, but a trillons-dollar war in poor Middle Eastern countries were absolutely vital to our national interests.