Why prescription drug abuse in the US impacts Latin America
鈥⑻齬esearches, analyzes, and investigates organized crime in the Americas. Find all of Elyssa Pachico's听.
A new Senate report highlights how prescription drug abuse is now one of the biggest health and security problems facing the US, casting doubt on the conventional wisdom that Latin American cartels still present the biggest risk to the US in terms of drug policy
罢丑别听听calls attention to a shift in drug consumption trends observed for several years now. While use of [...] cocaine and marijuana appears stable, if not decreasing, prescription drugs are now the second most common form of drug abuse in the US.听听the 鈥渢he Nation鈥檚 fastest-growing drug problem.鈥 And as the Senate briefing points out, prescription drugs are now responsible for the majority of overdose deaths in the US, outnumbering deaths involving heroin and cocaine combined. Meanwhile the number of people seeking treatment for addiction to legal opiates increased 400 percent between 2004 and 2008,听.
Rising prescription drug abuse has also led to increased violent robberies of pharmacies, up 82 percent between 2006 and 2011, the Senate briefing notes. The implication is that not only is prescription drug abuse leading to serious health problems across the US, but it is becoming a security issue as well.听听迟辞听, local law enforcement is reporting a rise in violent crime and theft linked to prescription drugs.
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Such findings are further indication that the major drug policy challenges facing the US increasingly have less to do with the illegal drugs traditionally supplied by Latin American criminal organizations. Latin America-based cartels are hardly the main suppliers when it comes the prescription drug epidemic:听, 70 percent of prescription drug abusers in the US were supplied their pills by a friend or a relative. The epidemic raises the tricky question of just how many resources the US should continue putting into international drug enforcement in Latin America, when it鈥檚 clear that the more pressing challenges facing the country lie within its own borders and its domestic laws regarding pharmaceutical drugs.
Shifting drug consumption habits in the US also call into question repeated claims by Latin American countries that their struggle against organized crime is primarily driven by US consumers of cocaine and marijuana. The Senate Caucas report acknowledges the US鈥檚 shared responsibility in this problem, stating, 鈥淯ltimately, it is drug consumption in the United States that fuels violence throughout Latin America and the Caribbean.鈥
While it is important for the US to emphasize this, it shouldn鈥檛 distract from the evidence showing that much of the violence afflicting places like Colombia, Mexico, and the Northern Triangle [El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras] is partly driven by growing domestic consumption in those countries.听, cocaine and crack use is rising across Latin America.听听a similar trend in their 2011 survey of drug use dynamics in the hemisphere. As cocaine use goes down and prescription drug use goes up in the US, it appears that Latin America is compensating in terms of supplying its own cocaine and crack users.
This year has听听for a more nuanced debate on drug policy. One of the fundamental problems is that the US鈥檚 traditional focus on Latin America-sourced cocaine, marijuana, and heroin is outdated. Prescription and synthetic drugs 鈥 such as the 鈥渂ath salts鈥 that are reportedly becoming more widely available in Latin America, and听听鈥 may turn out to be the more significant drug policy challenges in the 21st century.
The US has already rung plenty of alarm bells that the prescription drug epidemic needs plenty of attention from policymakers. And if there are new drugs besides cocaine and marijuana that are causing the most significant health and security problems in the US, policymakers would do well to apply a new drug policy strategy that would have ramifications for Latin America as well.听, it would be a lost opportunity not to encourage the same approach south of the border.
鈥听听听researches, analyzes, and investigates organized crime in the Americas. Find all of听Elyssa Pachico鈥檚 work听