Genocide by
Prescription
The ‘Natural History’ of the Declining White Working
Class in America
By James
Petras and Robin Eastman-Abaya, MD
July 12,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- The white working class in the US has been
decimated through an epidemic of ‘premature deaths’
– a bland term to cover-up the drop in life
expectancy in this historically important
demographic. There have been quiet studies and
reports peripherally describing this trend – but
their conclusions have not yet entered the national
consciousness for reasons we will try to explore in
this essay. Indeed this is the first time in the
country’s ‘peacetime’ history that its traditional
core productive sector has experienced such a
dramatic demographic decline – and the epicenter is
in the small towns and rural communities of the
United States.
The causes
for ‘premature death’ (dying before normal life
expectancy – usually of preventable conditions)
include the sharply increasing incidence of suicide,
untreated complications of diabetes and obesity and
above all ’accidental poisoning’ – a euphemism used
to describe what are mostly prescription and illegal
drug overdoses and toxic drug interactions.
No one
knows the total number of deaths of American
citizens due to drug overdose and fatal drug
interactions over the past 20 years, just as no
central body has kept track of the numbers of poor
people killed by police nationwide, but let’s start
with a conservative round number – 500,000 mostly
white working class victims, and challenge the
authorities to come up with some real statistics
with real definitions. Indeed such a number could be
much higher – if they included fatal poly-pharmacy
deaths and ‘medication errors’ occurring in the
hospital and nursing home setting.
In the last
few years, scores of thousands of Americas have died
prematurely because of drug overdoses or toxic drug
interactions, mostly related to narcotic pain
medications prescribed by doctors and other
providers. Among those who have increasingly died of
illegal opioid, mostly heroin, fentanyl and
methadone, overdose, the vast majority first became
addicted to the powerful synthetic opioids
prescribed by the medical community, supplied by big
chain pharmacies and manufactured at incredible
profit margins by the leading pharmaceutical
companies. In essence, this epidemic has been
promoted, subsidized and protected by the government
at all levels and reflects the protection of a
profit-maximizing private medical-pharmaceutical
market gone wild.
This is not
seen elsewhere in the world at such a level. For
example, despite their proclivity for alcohol,
obesity and tobacco – the British patient population
has been essentially spared this epidemic because
their National Health System is regulated and
functions with a different ethic: patient well being
is valued over naked profit. This arguably would not
have developed in the US if a single-payer national
health system had been implemented.
Faced with
the increasing incidence of returning Iraq and
Afghanistan veterans dying from suicide and overdose
from prescription opioids and mixed drug reactions,
the Armed Forces Surgeon General and medical corps
convened ‘emergency’ US Senate Hearings in March
2010 where testimony showed military doctors had
written 4 million prescriptions of powerful
narcotics in 2009, a 4 fold increase from 2001.
Senate members of the hearings, led by Virginia’s
Jim Webb, cautioned not casting a negative light on
‘Big Pharma’ among the largest donors to political
campaigns.
The 1960’s
public image of the heroin-addicted returning
Vietnam War soldier that shocked the nation had
morphed into the Oxycontin/Xanax dependent veteran
of the new millennium, thanks to ‘Big Pharma’s’
enormous contracts with the US Armed Forces and the
mass media looked away. Suicides, overdoses and
‘sudden deaths’ killed many more soldiers than
combat.
No other
peaceful population, probably since the 1839 Opium
Wars, has been so devastated by a drug epidemic
encouraged by a government. In the case of the Opium
Wars, the British Empire and its commercial arm, The
East India Company, sought a market for their huge
South Asian opium crops and used its military and
allied Chinese warlord mercenaries to force a
massive opium distribution on the Chinese people,
seizing Hong Kong in the process as a hub for its
imperial opium trade. Alarmed at the destructive
effects of addiction on its productive population,
the Chinese government tried to ban or regulate
narcotic use. Its defeat at British hands marked
China’s decline into semi-colonial status for the
next century – such are the wider consequences of
having an addicted population.
This paper
will identify the (1) the nature of the long-term,
large-scale drug induced deaths, (2) the dynamics of
‘demographic transition by overdose’, and (3) the
political economy of opioid addiction. This paper
will not cite numbers or reports – these are widely
available. However they are scattered, incomplete
and generally lack any theoretical framework to
understand, let alone confront, the phenomenon.
We will
conclude by discussing whether each ‘death by
prescription’ is to be viewed as an individual
tragedy, mourned in private, or as a corporate crime
fueled by greed or even a pattern of
‘Social-Darwinism-writ-large’ by an elite-run
decision making apparatus.
Since the
advent of major political-economic changes induced
by neoliberalism, America’s oligarchic class
confronts the problem of a large and potentially
restive population of millions of marginalized
workers and downwardly mobile members of the middle
class made redundant by ‘globalization’ and an armed
rural poor sinking ever deeper into squalor. In
other words, when finance capital and elite ruling
bodies view an increasing ‘useless’ population of
white workers, employees and the poor in this
geographic context, what ‘peaceful’ measures can be
taken to ease and encourage their ‘natural decline’?
A similar
pattern emerged in the early ‘AIDS’ crisis where the
Reagan Administration deliberately ignored the
soaring deaths among young Americans, especially
minorities, adopting a moralistic ‘blame the victim’
approach until the influential gay community
organized and demanded government action.
The
Scale and Scope of Drug Deaths
In the past
two decades, hundreds of thousands of working age
Americans have died from drugs. The lack of hard
data is a scandal. The scarcity is due to a
fragmented, incompetent and deliberately incomplete
system of medical records and death certificates –
especially from the poorer rural areas and small
towns where there is virtually no support for
producing and maintaining quality records. This
great data void is multi-faceted and hampered by the
problems of regionalism and a lack of clear
governmental public health direction.
Early in
the crisis, medical professionals and coroners were
largely in ‘denial’ and under pressure to certify
‘unexpected’ deaths as ‘natural due to pre-existing
conditions’ – despite overwhelming evidence that
there had been reckless overprescribing by the local
medical community. Fifteen to twenty years ago, the
victims’ families, isolated in their little towns,
may have derived some short-term comfort from seeing
the term ‘natural’ attached to their loved-one’s
untimely death. Understandably, a diagnosis of
‘death by drug overdose’ would evoke tremendous
social and personal shame among the rural and
small-town white working class families who had
traditionally associated narcotics with the urban
minority and criminal populations. They thought
themselves immune to such ‘big city’ problem. They
trusted ‘their’ doctors who, in turn, trusted ‘Big
Pharma’s’ assurances that the new synthetic opioids
were not addicting and could be prescribed in large
quantities.
Despite the
local medical community’s slowly growing awareness
of this problem, there was little public attempt to
educate the at-risk population and still fewer
attempts to rein in the over-prescribing brethren
physicians and private ‘pain-clinics’. They, or
their nurse practitioners and PA’s, did not counsel
patients on the immense dangers of combining opioids
and alcohol or tranquilizers. Many, in fact, were
not even aware of what their patients were
prescribed by other providers. It is common to see
healthy younger adults with multiple prescriptions
from multiple providers.
Through the
last few decades under neo-liberalism, rural county
heath department budgets were stripped because of
business-promoted austerity programs. Instead, the
federal government mandated that they implement
expensive and absurd plans to confront
‘bio-terrorism’. Often, health departments lacked
the necessary budget to pay for the costly forensic
toxicology testing required for documenting drug
levels in suspect overdose cases among their own
population.
Further
compounding this lack of quality data, there was no
guidance or coordination from the federal and state
government or regional DEA regarding systematic
documentation and the development of a usable
database for analyzing the widespread consequences
of overprescribing legal narcotics. The early crisis
received minimal attention from these bodies.
All
official eyes were focused on the ‘war on drugs’ as
it was being waged against the poor, urban minority
population. The small towns, where over-prescribing
doctors formed the pillars of the local churches or
country clubs, suffered in silence. The greater
public was lulled by media mis-education into
thinking that addiction and related deaths were an
‘inner city’ problem, one that required the usual
racist response of filling up the prisons with young
blacks and Hispanics for petty crimes or drug
possession.
But within
this vacuum, white working class children were
starting to dial ‘911’…because, ‘Mommy won’t wake
up…’. Mommy with her ‘prescribed Fentanyl patches’
took just one Xanax too many and devastated an
entire family unit. This was the prototype of a
raging epidemic. All throughout the country these
alarming cases were growing. Some rural counties saw
the proportion of addicted infants born to addicted
mothers overwhelm their unprepared hospital systems.
And the local obituary pages published increasing
numbers of young names and faces besides the very
elderly –never printing any ‘cause’ for the untimely
demise of a young adult while devoting paragraphs
for a departed octogenarian.
Recent
trends demonstrate that drug deaths (both opiate
overdose and fatal mixed interactions with other
drugs and alcohol) have had a major impact on the
composition of the local labor force, families,
communities and neighborhoods. This is reflected in
the lives of workers, whose personal life and
employment has been severely impaired by corporate
plant relocations, downsizing, cuts in wages and
health benefits. The traditional support systems,
which provided aid to workers damaged by these
trends, such as trade unions, public social workers
and mental health professionals, were either unable
or unwilling to intervene before or after the
scourge of drug addiction had come into play.
The
Dynamic Demography of Drug-Induced Death
Almost all
publicized reports ignore the demography and
differential class impacts of prescription-related
drug deaths. The majority of those killed by illegal
drugs were first addicted to legal narcotics
prescribed by their providers. Only the overdose
deaths of celebrities manage to hit the headlines.
Most of the
victims have been low wage, unemployed or
under-employed members of the white working class.
Their prospects for the future are dismal. Any dream
of establishing a healthy family life on one salary
in ‘Heartland America’ would be met with laughter.
This is a huge national population, which has
experienced a steep decline in its living standards
because of deindustrialization. The majority of
fatal overdose victims are white working age males,
but with a large proportion of working class women,
often mothers with children. There has been little
discussion about the impact of an overdose death of
a working age woman on the extended family. They
include grandmothers in their 50’s living with three
generations under one roof. In this demographic,
women often provide critical cohesion and stability
for several generations at risk – even if they had
been taking ‘Oxy’ for their chronic pain.
Apparently
the US minority population has so far escaped this
epidemic. Black and Hispanic Americans had already
been depressed and economically marginalized for a
much longer period – and the lower rate of
prescription drug deaths among their populations may
reflect greater resilience. It certainly reflects
their reduced access to the over-prescribing
private-sector medical community – a grim paradox
where medical ‘neglect’ might indeed have been
‘benign’.
While there
may be few class-based studies looking at
comparative trends in ‘overdose deaths’ among urban
minorities and rural/small town whites from
sociology, public health or minority-studies
university departments, anecdotal evidence and
personal observation suggest that minority urban
populations are more likely to provide assistance to
an overdosing neighbor or friend than in the white
community where addicts are more likely to be
isolated and abandoned by family members ashamed of
their ‘weakness’. Even the practice of ‘dumping’ an
overdosed friend at the entrance of an emergency
department and walking away has saved many lives.
Urban minorities have greater access and familiarity
with the chaotic big-city emergency rooms where
medical personnel are skilled at recognizing and
treating overdose. After decades of civil rights
struggles, minorities are possibly more
sophisticated in asserting their rights regarding
use of such public resources. There may even be a
relatively stronger culture of solidarity among the
marginalized minorities in rendering assistance or
an awareness of the consequences of not taking
someone’s neighbor to the ER. These urban survival
mechanisms have been largely absent in the white
rural areas.
Nationwide,
US doctors had long been dissuaded from prescribing
powerful synthetic opioids to minority patients,
even those in significant pain. There are various
factors here, but the medical community has not been
immune to the stereotype of the Hispanic or black
urban addict or dealer. Perhaps, this widespread
medical ‘racism’ in the context of the prescription
opioid epidemic has had some paradoxical benefit.
Whatever
the reason, urban minority addicts, while
experiencing overdose in large numbers are more
likely to survive an opiate overdose than small town
or rural whites, unfamiliar with narcotics and their
effects.
In the
rural and small-town (deindustrialized) US heartland
there has been an enormous breakdown in community
and family solidarity. This has followed the
destruction of a century-old stable employment base,
especially in the manufacturing, mining and
productive agricultural sectors. Only post-Soviet
Russia experienced a similar pattern of declining
life expectancy from ‘poisoning’ (alcohol and drugs)
following the nationwide destruction of its
socialized full employment system and the breakdown
of all social services. Furthermore the loss of the
tough Soviet police apparatus and the growth of an
oligarch-mafia class saw the tremendous in-flooding
of heroin from Afghanistan.
The growth
of opioid addiction is not based on ‘personal
choice’, nor is it the result of shifts in cultural
life styles. While all class and educational levels
are included among the victims, the overwhelming
majority are younger white working class and the
poor. They cover all age groups, including
adolescents recovering from sports injuries, as well
as the elderly with joint and back pain. The surge
of addiction is a result of major shifts in the
economy and the social structure. The regions most
affected by overdose deaths are those in deep,
prolonged and permanent decline, including the
former ‘rust belt’ regions, small manufacturing
towns of New England, Upstate New York, Pennsylvania
and the rural South and agricultural, mining and
forestry regions of the west.
This is the
product of private executive decisions to (1)
relocate productive US companies overseas or to
distant, non-union regions of the country, (2) force
once well-paid employees into lower paid jobs, (3)
replace American workers with skilled and unskilled
foreign immigrants or poorly paid ‘temps’, (4)
eliminate pension and health benefits and (5)
introduce new technology – including robots- which
cuts the labor force by rendering human workers
redundant. These changes in the relationship of
capital to labor have created enormous profits for
senior executives and investors, while producing a
surplus labor force, which puts even greater
pressure on young first-time workers and workers
with seniority. There have been no effective job
protection/ sustainable job creation programs to
address the decades of declining well-paid
employment. Good jobs have been replaced by minimum
wage, service sector ‘MacJobs’ or temporary poorly
paid manufacturing jobs with no benefits or
protections. All across this devastated heartland,
expensively touted programs, such as ‘Start-Up New
York’, have failed to bring decent jobs while
spending hundreds of millions of public money in
free PR for state politicians.
The drug
addiction epidemic has been most deadly precisely in
those regions of industrial job loss and working
wage decline, as well as in the depressed, once
protected, agricultural and food processing sectors
where union jobs have been replaced by minimum wage
immigrants. The loss of stable employment has been
accompanied by a slashing of social services and
tremendous cuts in benefits – just when such
services should have been bolstered.
Precisely
because the so-called ‘drug problem’ is linked to
major demographic changes resulting from dynamic
capitalist shifts, it has never been the focus of
elite-run government and corporate foundation grant
research – unlike their fixation on the
‘radicalization of Muslims’ or ‘trends in urban
crime’. Research tended to focus on ‘minorities’ or
merely nibbled at the periphery of the current
phenomenon. Good studies and data would have
provided the rationale and basis for major public
programs aimed at protecting the lives of
marginalized white workers and reversing the deadly
trends. The decade-long, nation-wide absence of
research and data into this phenomenon has justified
the glaring absence of an effective governmental
response. Here the ‘neglect’ has not been ‘benign’.
In parallel
with the increase in opioid addiction, there has
been an astronomical increase in the prescription of
psychotropic drugs and anti-depressants to the same
population – also highly profitable to ‘Big Pharma’.
The pattern of prescribing such powerful, and
potentially dangerous, mood altering medications to
downwardly mobile Americans to ‘treat’ or numb
normal anxieties and reactions to the deterioration
in their material condition has had profound
consequences. Such individuals, often on
unemployment assistance or MEDICAID, may be expected
to follow a complex daily regimen of up to nine
medications – besides their narcotic pain
medications, while trying to cope with their
crumbling world.
Where a
dignified job with a decent wage would effectively
treat a marginalized worker’s despair without
unpleasant or dangerous ‘side effects’, the medical
and mental health community has consistently sent
their patients to ‘Big Pharma’. As a result,
post-mortem toxicological analyses often show
multiple prescribed psychotropic medications and
anti-depressants in addition to narcotics in cases
of opioid overdose deaths. While this may constitute
an abdication of the medical provider’s
responsibility to patients, it is also a reflection
of the medical community’s utter helplessness in the
face of systemic social breakdown – as has occurred
in the marginalized communities where drug overdose
deaths concentrate.
Demographic
studies, at best, identify the victims of drug
addiction. But their choice to treat their despair
as an ‘individual problem’ occurring in a ‘specific,
immediate context’ overlooks the greater political
and economic structures, which set the stage for
premature death.
The
Political Economy of Overdose Deaths
When the
remains of a young working class overdose victim is
wheeled into a morgue, his or her untimely demise is
labelled a ‘self-inflicted’ or ‘accidental’ opioid
overdose and a great cover-up machine is turned on:
The sequence leading up to the death is shrouded in
mystery, no deeper understanding of the
socio-cultural and economic factors are sought.
Instead, the victim or his/her culture is blamed for
the end-result of a complex chain of elite
capitalist economic decisions and political
maneuverings in which a worker’s premature death is
a mere collateral event. The medical community has
merely functioned as the transmission belt in this
process, rather than as an agent for serving the
public.
The vast
majority of overdose fatalities are, in reality,
victims of decisions and losses far beyond their
control. Their addictions have shortened their lives
as well as clouded their understanding of events and
undermined their capacity to engage in class
struggle to reverse this trend. It has been a
perfect solution to the predictable demographic
problems of brutal neoliberalism in America.
Wall Street
and Washington designed the macro-economy that has
eliminated decent jobs, cut wages and slashed
benefits. As a result millions of marginalized
workers and the unemployed are under tremendous
tension and resort to pharmacologic solutions to
endure their pain because they are not organized.
The historical leading role of trade union and
community organizations has been eliminated.
Instead, redundant workers are ‘charged by Big
Pharma’ to dig their own graves and class leaders
are nowhere to be found.
Secondly,
the workplace has become much more dangerous under
the ‘new economic order’. Bosses no longer fear
unions and safety regulations: many workers are
injured by the accelerating pace of work, longer
hours, faulty job training and lack of federal
supervision of working conditions. Injured workers,
lacking any judicial, trade union, or public agency
protection rightly fear retaliation for reporting
their work injury and increasingly resort to
prescription narcotics to cope with acute and
chronic pain while continuing to work.
When
employers allow workers to report their injuries,
the low coverage and limited treatments available,
encourage providers to over-prescribe narcotics on
top of other medications with potentially dangerous
interactions. Many pain clinics, contracted by
employers, are eager to profit from injured clients
while pharmaceutical companies actively promote
powerful synthetic narcotics.
A vicious
chain is formed: The pharmaceutical industry’s mass
production of narcotics has been among its most
profitable products. Corporate pharmacy chains fill
the prescriptions written by tens of thousands of
‘providers’ (doctors, dentists, nurses and physician
assistants) who have only a limited amount of time
to actually examine an injured worker. The
deteriorating work conditions create the injury and
the workers become consumers of Big Pharma’s miracle
relief – Oxycontin or its cousins – which a decade
of drug salesmen had touted as ‘non-addicting’. A
long line of highly educated professionals,
including doctors and other providers, pathologists,
medical examiners and coroners carefully paper over
the real cause, the corporate decision makers, in
order to protect themselves from corporate reprisals
should they ‘blow the whistle’. Behind the
scientific façade there is a Social Darwinism that
few are willing to confront.
Only
recently, in the face of incredible numbers of
hospitalizations and deaths from narcotic overdose,
the federal government has started to release funds
for research. Academic-medical researchers have
started to collect and publicize data on the growing
epidemic of opiate deaths; they provide shocking
maps of the most affected counties and regions. They
join the chorus in urging the federal and state
agencies to become more actively involved in usual
panacea: ‘education and prevention’. This beehive of
activity has come two decades too late into the
epidemic and reeks of cynicism.
Funding for
research into this phenomenon will not result in any
effective long-term programs for confronting these
small community-based ‘crises of capitalism’. There
is no institution willing to confront the basic
cause: the devastation of capitalist– labor
relations in post-millennial America, the corrupt
nature of state-corporate-pharmaceutical linkages
and the chaotic, profit-driven character of our
private medical system. Very few writers ever
explore how a national, public, single-payer, health
system would have clearly prevented with epidemic
from the beginning.
Conclusion
Why does
the capitalist-state and pharmaceutical elite
sustain a socio-economic process, which has led to
the large-scale, long-term death of workers and
their family members in rural and small town
America?
One ready
and convincing hypothesis is that the modern dynamic
corporate elite profits from the results of
‘demographic change by overdose.’
Corporations gain billions of dollars in profits
from the ‘natural decline’ of redundant workers:
slashing social services and job benefits, such as
health plans, pension, vacation, job training
programs, allowing employers to increase their
profits, capital gains, executive bonuses and
raises. Public services are eliminated, taxes are
reduced and workers, when needed, can be imported –
fully formed – from abroad for temporary employment
in a ‘free labor market’.
Capitalists
profit even more from the technology gains – robots,
computerization, etc. – by ensuring that workers do
not enjoy reduced hours or increased vacations
resulting from their increased productivity. Why
share the results of productivity gains with the
workers, when the workers can just be eliminated?
Dissatisfied workers can turn inward or ‘pop a
pill’, but never organize to retake control of their
lives and future.
Election
experts and political pundits can claim that white
American workers reject the major establishment
parties because they are ‘angry’ and ‘racist’. These
are the workers who now turn to a ‘Donald Trump’.
But a deeper analysis would reveal their rational
rejection of political leaders who have refused to
condemn capitalist exploitation and confront the
epidemic of death by overdose.
There is a
class basis for this veritable genocide by narcotics
raging among white workers and the unemployed in the
small towns and rural areas of American: it is the
‘perfect’ corporate solution to a surplus labor
force. It is time for American workers and their
leaders to wake up to this cruel fact and resist
this one-sided class war or continue to mourn more
untimely deaths in their own drug-numbed silence.
And it is
time for the medical community to demand a
‘patient-first’ publicly accountable national health
system that rewards service over profit, and
responsibility over silent complicity.
James
Petras is a Bartle Professor (Emeritus) of Sociology
at Binghamton University, New York.
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