
Pain Killer
From the Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times reporter who first exposed the roots of the opioid epidemic and the secretive world of the Sackler family behind Purdue Pharma, Pain Killer is the celebrated landmark story of corporate greed and government negligence that inspired the Netflix limited series Painkiller. 'This is......
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<b>From the Pulitzer Prizewinning <i>New York Times</i> reporter who first exposed the roots of the opioid epidemic and the secretive world of the Sackler family behind Purdue Pharma, <i>Pain Killer</i> is the celebrated landmark story of corporate greed and government negligence that inspired the Netflix limited series <i>Painkiller</i>. <br><br>This is the book that started it all. Barry Meier is a heroic reporter and <i>Pain Killer</i> is a muckraking classic.Patrick Radden Keefe, author of <i>Empire of Pain</i></b><br><br><b><i>New York Times Book Review </i>Editors Choice</b><br><br>Between 1999 and 2017, an estimated 250,000 Americans died from overdoses involving prescription painkillers, a plague ignited by Purdue Pharmas aggressive marketing of OxyContin. Families, working class and wealthy, have been torn apart, businesses destroyed, and public officials pushed to the brink. Meanwhile, the drugmakers owners, Raymond and Mortimer Sackler, whose names adorn museums worldwide, made enormous fortunes from the commercial success of OxyContin.<br> <br>In <i>Pain Killer,</i> Barry Meier tells the story of how Purdue turned OxyContin into a billion-dollar blockbuster. Powerful narcotic painkillers, or opioids, were once used as drugs of last resort for pain sufferers. But Purdue launched an unprecedented marketing campaign claiming that the drugs long-acting formulation made it safer to use than traditional painkillers for many types of pain. That illusion was quickly shattered as drug abusers learned that crushing an Oxy could release its narcotic payload all at once. Even in its prescribed form, Oxy proved fiercely addictive. As OxyContins use and abuse grew, Purdue concealed what it knew from regulators, doctors, and patients.<br> <br>Here are the people who profited from the crisis and those who paid the price, those who plotted in boardrooms and those who tried to sound alarm bells. A country doctor in rural Virginia, Art Van Zee, took on Purdue and warned officials about OxyContin abuse. An ebullient high school cheerleader, Lindsey Myers, was reduced to stealing from her parents to feed her escalating Oxy habit. A hard-charging DEA official, Laura Nagel, tried to hold Purdue executives to account.<br> <br>In <i>Pain Killer,</i> Barry Meier breaks new ground in his decades-long investigation into the opioid epidemic. He takes readers inside Purdue to show how long the company withheld information about the abuse of OxyContin and gives a shocking account of the Justice Departments failure to alter the trajectory of the opioid epidemic and protect thousands of lives. Equal parts crime thriller, medical detective story, and business exposé, <i>Pain Killer</i> is a hard-hitting look at how a supposed wonder drug became the gateway drug to a national tragedy.
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