A searing indictment of Big Pharma and the political operatives and government regulations that enable over-production, reckless distribution and abuse of synthetic opiates.A searing indictment of Big Pharma and the political operatives and government regulations that enable over-production, reckless distribution and abuse of synthetic opiates.A searing indictment of Big Pharma and the political operatives and government regulations that enable over-production, reckless distribution and abuse of synthetic opiates.
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I was left stunned by this documentary. I'm going to watch it again so I can absorb more now that I'm over my initial shock at the greed and lack of humanity in the people involved. I would love to see a follow-up documentary about how it affected individuals lives. This had some of that but I would like to see more. Well done HBO. The way you weaved this story together was amazing. We had some idea of this problem but really knew nothing. Thank you for bringing so much light to this horrific problem. Kudos to the small town doctors that tried to sound off the alarm bell. There's a lot of shame to go around, all for a damn buck.
I think the low scores are for this being too long. I just dont think they stuck around. Part 1 covers familiar territory covered in Dopesick along with earlier Doc productions. At end of 1, I couldn't imagine what 2 had left to cover. Part 2 covers the detail on distributors and pharma companies imitating Purdue biz model and tactics. It was news for me the doc gets into SEC companies having boiler rooms dedicated to defrauding insurance companies and the intricacies of seducing and bribing medical professionals is detailed here where other sources merely reference.
Without sensationalism Gibney documents a big, depressing account of irresponsible corporate greed and their minion supplicants. Drug dependecy moves to a white, mainstream, population thanks to sophisticated, deceitful marketing. Big, big story.
Profiteers blame it on the moral weakness of its victims. Spit in your hand, swish the pill in spittle , remove the time release coating, Rush Limbaugh taught me that (sorta).
FWIW, 2010-13 i worked in many rural areas VA-ME and kept seeing front page overdose stories, spikes in rates, narcan for cops, etc.
Without sensationalism Gibney documents a big, depressing account of irresponsible corporate greed and their minion supplicants. Drug dependecy moves to a white, mainstream, population thanks to sophisticated, deceitful marketing. Big, big story.
Profiteers blame it on the moral weakness of its victims. Spit in your hand, swish the pill in spittle , remove the time release coating, Rush Limbaugh taught me that (sorta).
FWIW, 2010-13 i worked in many rural areas VA-ME and kept seeing front page overdose stories, spikes in rates, narcan for cops, etc.
This is a must watch to better understand the inner working of "big pharma", big bushiness' relationship with our government leaders that continuously sell themselves to the highest bidder, and the dramatic negative impact this relationship has on the US citizens.
Not a lot of the information here is new knowledge having been reported on in the past by others, but this well done documentary puts it together in a way that clearly draws the line between greed and the ruin of many lives in this country.
As someone in a family affected by the opioid epidemic and had read much on the topic, there were even a few eye opening moments during the 2 episodes for me. In our family it started with Oxy being prescribed for simple back pain, something that a much less addictive pain killer would have addressed. This is exactly the wrong doing that has been called out. Oxy and other opioids have a place in medicine, but the over subscribing for mild ailments is what led many housewives, teenagers, etc to become addicted. The pushing of the drug by Purdue and others drug companies, the blatant skirting of regulations by the distributors, and lack of controls at pharmacies (even large corporate ones like CVS) allowed the epidemic to grow faster than any possible containment.
Why only 8 stars then? Because the second episode, in m opinion, spent too much time with some of the characters that were involved in the problem and almost reached a point where it seemed like they were trying to make us feel sorry for some of those that were "caught up" in the selling and pushing of an addictive drug that caused the deaths of so many. That part was a little too much for me.
That said the 2 part series is a must watch.
Not a lot of the information here is new knowledge having been reported on in the past by others, but this well done documentary puts it together in a way that clearly draws the line between greed and the ruin of many lives in this country.
As someone in a family affected by the opioid epidemic and had read much on the topic, there were even a few eye opening moments during the 2 episodes for me. In our family it started with Oxy being prescribed for simple back pain, something that a much less addictive pain killer would have addressed. This is exactly the wrong doing that has been called out. Oxy and other opioids have a place in medicine, but the over subscribing for mild ailments is what led many housewives, teenagers, etc to become addicted. The pushing of the drug by Purdue and others drug companies, the blatant skirting of regulations by the distributors, and lack of controls at pharmacies (even large corporate ones like CVS) allowed the epidemic to grow faster than any possible containment.
Why only 8 stars then? Because the second episode, in m opinion, spent too much time with some of the characters that were involved in the problem and almost reached a point where it seemed like they were trying to make us feel sorry for some of those that were "caught up" in the selling and pushing of an addictive drug that caused the deaths of so many. That part was a little too much for me.
That said the 2 part series is a must watch.
Definitely eye opening as I take my Xanax and have a cocktail. It's the sad truth we're all escaping something.
This is the best documentary I have ever seen, and the implications are exponential! I recommend watching it more than once, and taking notes. There is a lot to unpack, so to speak!
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