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posted by janrinok on Monday December 30 2019, @09:53PM   Printer-friendly
from the need-not-greed dept.

Rwanda makes its own morphine while U.S. awash with opioids:

It was something, the silence. Nothing but the puff of her breath and the scuff of her slip-on shoes as Madeleine Mukantagara walked through the fields to her first patient of the day. Piercing cries once echoed down the hill to the road below. What she carried in her bag had calmed them.

For 15 years, her patient Vestine Uwizeyimana had been in unrelenting pain as disease wore away at her spine. She could no longer walk and could barely turn over in bed. Her life narrowed to a small, dark room with a dirt-floor in rural Rwanda, prayer beads hanging on the wall by her side.

A year ago, relief came in the form of liquid morphine, locally produced as part of Rwanda's groundbreaking effort to address one of the world's great inequities: As thousands die from addiction in rich countries awash with prescription painkillers, millions of people writhe in agony in the poorest nations with no access to opioids at all.

Companies don't make money selling cheap, generic morphine to the poor and dying, and most people in sub-Saharan Africa cannot afford the expensive formulations like oxycodone and fentanyl, prescribed so abundantly in richer nations that thousands became addicted to them.

Rwanda's answer: plastic bottles of morphine, produced for pennies and delivered to homes across the country by community health workers like Mukantagara. It is proof, advocates say, that the opioid trade doesn't have to be guided by how much money can be made.


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  • (Score: 5, Interesting) by barbara hudson on Tuesday December 31 2019, @01:14AM (2 children)

    by barbara hudson (6443) <barbara.Jane.hudson@icloud.com> on Tuesday December 31 2019, @01:14AM (#937677) Journal
    Not really. OxyContin was marketed to doctors as non-addictive. I remember reading an article in Scientific American about how it was impossible to become addicted to it because it worked via a different mechanism. The researchers were putting their names to papers ghost written by the pharmaceutical companies, with the only acknowledgment to the ghost writers being a thank you for editorial assistance.

    Same thing with phoney studies that supported Prozac for kids. [madinamerica.com]

    At least half of all approved psychiatric medications don't work; many do real harm.

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 31 2019, @01:19AM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 31 2019, @01:19AM (#937678)

    But think of the jobs created!

    • (Score: 2) by barbara hudson on Tuesday December 31 2019, @03:50PM

      by barbara hudson (6443) <barbara.Jane.hudson@icloud.com> on Tuesday December 31 2019, @03:50PM (#937854) Journal
      What, at the mortuary?

      Think about the jobs lost because the dead can't pay taxes, don't buy stuff, don't halo create jobs with their spending.

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      SoylentNews is social media. Says so right in the slogan. Soylentnews is people, not tech.