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Lingering Pain
Medical school alumnus helped spur a national movement against misused prescription opioids
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Art Van Zee
In late 1999, physician Art Van Zee, MD (MED 73), began to see increasing numbers of young adult patients struggling with addiction to OxyContin, an opioid-based painkiller. He was working at a community health clinic in St. Charles, Virginia, a small Appalachian coal town where hed moved in 1976 after an internal-medicine residency and had close ties to the community.
They were good kids with bright, promising futures, and this was all being hijacked by their development of opioid-use disorder, said Van Zee, who saw a tsunami of opioid addiction overtake his region. Its hard to overstate the tragedy this brought countless individuals and families and communities.
Van Zee became an activist, among the earliest in the battle to stop the deadly epidemic. He called attention to the addictive dangers of Purdue Pharmas OxyContin, beginning with a petition drive in 2001 asking the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to take the drug off the market.
He also spoke at FDA meetings, testified before Congress and authored a widely cited 2009 paper in the American Journal of Public Health about the marketing and promotion of OxyContin.
Now, a reckoning is underway that he said is both long overdue and insufficient because it doesnt include prison terms. Purdue is in bankruptcy, and its Sackler family owners may pay as much as $6 billion in a legal settlement. They said they acted lawfully. Settlements with other companies also have been reached.
Van Zees work has been highlighted in two books, one of which was turned into last years fictionalized series Dopesick on Hulu.
He recently talked with Think. The conversation has been edited for length.
I thought when people couldnt just say, These are just hillbilly kids dying of overdoses in Appalachia—when kids started dying in Boston and White Plains and Shaker Heights—that things would be different. But they werent. The [FDA] was so influenced by this narrative that the pharmaceutical manufacturers put out about how there was this epidemic of untreated pain—and that opioids were an effective tool for treatment.
—Art Van Zee
In 2003, I started using buprenorphine (Suboxone) in my practice to treat opioid-use disorder. I consider it one of the most effective and meaningful things I have done in more than 45 years as a physician.
They have to use evidence-based medicine to guide spending for prevention and treatment services. One of the things the state should really look at is the use of curriculums in the school system at the elementary and high school levels that have been shown to reduce substance use.
There can never be sufficient justice. With all the lives lost and families fractured, theres nothing that can ever make up for that. I have felt it is important that if its effectively shown what the leadership of Purdue knew and when they knew it and what they did [with that information], then there should be jail time. And that has not happened.
My own take is that we should prohibit the pharmaceutical industry from being able to market controlled and abusable drugs. Because if the system isnt changed... and theyre able to do this in the future, its only going to be a matter of time before theres a similar issue with a controlled and abusable drug.