[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 172 (Wednesday, October 25, 2017)]
[House]
[Page H8150]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
OPIOID EPIDEMIC
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Missouri (Mrs. Wagner) for 5 minutes.
Mrs. WAGNER. Mr. Speaker, the world is an ugly place right now. It
seems that at every turn there is another crisis--another barrier to
peace and prosperity, another obstacle to fight, or another cross to
bear. More of our citizens, women, children, and grandkids are turning
to something--anything--to mute the pain and create a false sense of
peace. Society has been infected by drug addiction, a disease fueled by
a loss of hope.
We see it on the news, we watch it online, we feel loss in our
communities. This disease is killing our friends and neighbors. Last
year alone, over 64,000 lives were lost. That is more casualties in a
year than we saw during the height of the Vietnam war.
And this is a war, too--a war being fought in the streets and in our
homes. And we are losing. Mothers, sons, daughters, and fathers are
dying--from the cold streets of major cities to the quiet fields of
rural America--we are all feeling the effects of the opioid crisis.
What can be done? That is a question I have asked countless law
enforcement officials, doctors, nurses, addiction treatment
professionals, and community leaders. There is no one solution to
stopping the opioid epidemic in this country.
This is a man-made disaster. We must face it head on with education
and awareness, addiction and recovery services, funding, prescription
drug monitoring programs, and prevention. We need to prevent our loved
ones from being dragged into the abyss of addiction and hopelessness.
According to the CDC, three out of four new heroin users report
abusing prescription opioids before using heroin. There is an easy step
each of us can take to help with prevention. We can get rid of our old
opioid prescriptions at home. Why chance someone taking them? Why
chance your loved one being a statistic?
This year alone, 153 individuals in St. Louis County have already
died of an overdose. How many of them started with prescribed opioids?
How many started by taking prescriptions from a parent or a family
member? If we could have saved just one of these lives by throwing away
old prescriptions, then isn't it worth it?
This Saturday, October 28, local law enforcement and the Drug
Enforcement Agency will be set up all around the country and in our
neighborhoods for National Prescription Drug Take Back Day. They are
providing safe and easy locations for you to throw away unused
prescription drugs.
I have no idea how many people can, and will, be saved by this one
simple act. But multiply this one act times thousands, and now we are
getting something done. Mr. Speaker, this is an epidemic this Nation
has never seen. This is a disease of our own making.
This week, there is something we all can do. Think about your
household. Go into your hidden cupboards and see if you have old
prescriptions. I bet you do. Take them. Find your nearest drug take
back location and throw them away.
We need to restore hope in this fight, and it won't happen overnight.
It will take work, prayer, patience, and vigilance. Hope can be
restored. If and when we band together to fight this epidemic, it will
happen.
So let's restore a little hope this week. Let's all join the fight to
end the opioid epidemic.
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