Addiction - Not a Moral Failing

One Step Forward - Three Steps Back

9 min · 16 sep 2025
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Beschrijving

For three consecutive years, the United States has recorded more than one hundred thousand overdose deaths. That figure is often repeated as a headline number, but it obscures the churn underneath: periods when prevention and treatment gained traction, when death curves bent downward, followed by reversals driven by policy retreat, fragmented execution, and the steady evolution of a more toxic drug supply. This episode is about those reversals. It is about what happens when a hard‑won advance is met with a cut, a lapse, or a shrug—and why the consequences of “less” in an overdose crisis reliably become “more” funerals. By Niklas S Osterman BHPRN, MA

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aflevering A Responsibility Deferred artwork

A Responsibility Deferred

America’s overdose crisis now claims over 100,000 lives every year – a staggering human cost that exceeds the toll of car crashes and gun violence. Each death is a son or daughter, a friend or parent, gone too soon. Yet this devastation is not for lack of medications, knowledge, or funding. We have effective treatments and proven harm reduction tools. What’s missing is the leadership to organize these assets into a functioning system. The truth is harsh: the country does not lack resources – it lacks oversight, governance, and a blueprint that coordinates the resources already on hand. Consider the scale of resources we do have. States are beginning to receive more than $50 billion from opioid lawsuit settlements earmarked for abatement. At the federal level, an array of 19 agencies already operates with roughly $44 billion dedicated to addressing addiction and the overdose. We have tens of thousands of treatment programs, first responders equipped with naloxone, and decades of research on what works. Money, programs, and knowledge exist. What we lack is a unifying strategy to deploy them coherently. No single entity ensures that all these efforts work in concert. No standard blueprint guides counties and states on how to build an effective continuum of care. The fragmentation means even well-intended efforts leave gaps through which people fall into tragedy. In short, we suffer not from scarcity but from disorganization. The overdose crisis is a failure of management, not imagination. By Niklas .S Osterman BHPRN, MA Addiction Specialist

16 sep 202512 min