IndianaNews

Report: Congress made fight against opioid abuse harder in 2016

The fight against opioid abuse in Indiana has been a tough one, and a new report by the Washington Post reports that Congress actually made the fight harder.

The article reports that in April 2016, a number of members of Congress partnered with the nation’s major drug distributors to pass a law that makes it impossible for the DEA to freeze what were identified as “suspicious” narcotic shipments of hundreds of millions of pills, thus allowing more of the pills to make it to the streets.

23 members of congress received at least $1.5-million from Political Action Committees representing the drug industry, who had before been subject to fines for the shipments.

Opioid overdose deaths in Indiana have more than quadrupled since 2009.

Find the full report here.

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1 comment

Tired of the Washington DC self serving swamp rats (all of congress) October 17, 2017 at 10:50 am

This would be the “swamp” that Trump spoke about during his campaign. These 23 congressmen should be forced to give the money they received to the hospitals that have to treat these people. They should also be court ordered to spend a few months in the streets helping police and paramedics deal with it as well. In the end nothing will be done and all will go on as usual. It will only ever change when the American People decide to vote in all new people every election for many, many elections to remove the “swamp rats”.

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