Change opioid prescribing guidance, U.S. lawmakers ask WHO
2019-05-22 from cbc.ca
Two U.S. lawmakers are calling on the World Health Organization to withdraw pain care guidelines that include what they say are false claims about the safety of prescription opioids.
They say the guidelines could lead other countries toward the same kind of addiction and overdose crisis that has plagued the U.S. in recent years.
The members of Congress say a 2011 manual and 2012 guidelines on opioids were influenced by people with financial connections to Purdue Pharma, the company that makes the powerful opioid painkiller OxyContin.
"We have come to believe that Purdue has leveraged its financial ties to successfully impact the content of the WHO's guidelines," Representatives Katherine Clark, a Massachusetts Democrat, and Hal Rogers, a Kentucky Republican, say in a letter to the health arm of the United Nations. "As a result, the WHO is, in effect, promoting the chronic use of opioids."
Clark said the report was put together because the WHO did not change its guidelines after a 2017 letter from her, Rogers and other members of Congress raised concerns that Purdue's international arm was aggressively marketing opioids abroad.
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