By Matt McCord
Using opioids to treat acute pain is very similar to the burning of coal to feed our houses. Both are inherited solutions of an earlier era. Both were celebrated as advances. And since then they have proven to be dirty, dangerous and incredible expensive to clean. Despite this, we continually trust them, even as safer alternatives and Emarter feel right in front of us.
Coal fed the industrial revolution, but did it at a high price: contaminated air, poisoned water, respiratory disease due to climate instability. It was never a clean solution, only convenient. Similarly, opioids became the pain solution not because they are ideal, but because they were easy. They fill the pain quickly, do not require a special ability to manage and were aggressively marketed to doctors as insurance and effective. Now we know the truth: opioids for acute pain can light a chain reaction that leads to depth, chronic pain, disability and death.
Short -term relief, long -term containers
The similarities are deep. Coal gives him power today, but society with pollution and disease tomorrow. Opioids sacrifice pain relief at the time, but leave patients worse in the long term. In boats, which is convenient in the short term, creates long -term mass externalnsity, not for the industries that benefit, but for workers, families and communities that remain to clean the disaster.
Systemic pollution
Coal pollution obstructs lungs and drowning Ríos. Opioids pollute something more intimate: the natural capacity of the brain to regulate pain.
Acute opioid use interrupts the normal modulation of pain, which leads to a phenomenon called opioid induced hyperalgesia, a sensitivity to sensitivity to pain. It is like installing an oven that makes your home colder over time, which requires more fuel just to maintain the reference comfort. That is the trap in which many patients are found after surgery or routine injury.
Hidden costs and broken systems
Coal seems cheap -tical that calculates the consequences for health, environmental damage and regulatory load. The same is true for opioids. The recipe may be covered by insurance, but the subsequent effects (addiction treatment, visits to the emergency room, lost productivity, broken families, parenting care plans, criminal justice costs and overdose deaths) paid by the rest of us. And the price is an internship. Like coal, opioids outsource their costs, masking the real price we all pay.
Entrenched interests and change resistance
Just as coal was supported by powerful lobbies and obsolete infrastructure, opioids have persisted due to habit, inertia and the influence of the industry. For decades, pharmaceutical companies promoted opioids with aggressive waste and marketing science. Today, the pharmaceutical industry continues to shape public perception, not only through lobbying, but through the media. Pharmaceutical companies are among the largest television advertisers, partly during news programming. This important advertising presence can influence the media narratives, potentially minimizing the role of opioids prescribed in the opioid crisis.
As a result, the public feeds on a new narrative: that fentanil is the problem, not the prescription opioids.
But this is dangerously misleading. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, approximately 75% of people with opioid consumption disorder began legally prescribed opioid. Only when we fail to decrease properly or sacrifice effective alternatives that patients resort to illicit drugs, now more and more mixed with fentanyl. This change in guilt masks the root cause and perpetuates a dangerous cycle.
We have better alternatives
The good news is that there are better pain solutions. Like solar, wind and equally modern energy, it is remodeling the economy of power, modern pain care is increasingly multimodal, not opioid and personalized. The safer and more emarter options are already aviaxable nerve blocks and anti -inflammatory care for non -addictive medications such as ketamine and gabapentin, along with physiotherapy and amazing test. These techniques not only relieve pain, but make it more effective, with less risk, greater long -term success and without interrupting the natural systems of body pain regulation. Not only do they cover the pain, they treat their causes.
Stop smoking coal cured our environment
The air was cleaned, the water was cleaned and the entire communities put that thriving. The same will be true for opioids. When we stop precibrating them due to acute pain, we will see less addictions, feer deaths and a stronger and more resistant society. But that future won on its own. Like coal, opioids gained silence: they must be replaced. The carbon era has ended. It is time for the era of opioids to too.
Matt McCord, MD is co -founder and executive director of Free opioid solutions