According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an average of 115 Americans died every day as a result of opioid overdoses between 1999 and 2016. In total, that is more than 350,000 people, from both prescription and illicit opioid use. In 2017, President Donald Trump declared the opioid epidemic to be a public health emergency. He directed the Department of Health and Human Services to take steps to address the crisis. One of the most pervasive of opioids in the U.S. is the painkiller OxyContin, a branded version of the drug oxycodone. OxyContin is a form of narcotic used to treat pain, including relief of pain from cancer, trauma, or major surgery. The drug, however, can be highly addictive, and people taking the drug can experience severe symptoms of withdrawal. Long-term use or misuse can lead to addiction, overdose, or death. Given the risks associated with OxyContin, many have questioned how the use of the drug could have become so widespread.
OxyContin is produced by the privately held pharmaceutical company Purdue Pharma. In 1995, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the use of the drug OxyContin. In 1996, in its first year on the market, OxyContin accounted for $45 million in sales for Purdue. By 2000, OxyContin generated $1.1 billion in sales. In 2010, profits from OxyContin rose to $3.1 billion. Behind the financial success of Purdue is the Sackler family. The company is owned primarily by descendants of Mortimer and Raymond Sackler, who, along with their brother Arthur, purchased Purdue Pharma in 1952. They made their original fortune in medical advertising, but sales of OxyContin have since increased the family’s wealth considerably. In 2015, Forbes estimated the Sackler family wealth at $14 billion, shared among 20 family members.
With the debut of OxyContin in 1996, Purdue expanded its sales department. At the time, the company had more than 300 sales representatives. By 2000, that number had increased to more than 600. By 2010, the company had more than 1,000 sales representatives. Sales reps were incentivized with large bonuses, cash prizes, and luxury vacations. In 2001, annual bonuses for sales reps averaged more than $70,000, with some reps earning nearly $250,000 in bonuses. In a 1996 memo from a sales manager to her staff titled “It’s Bonus Time in the Neighborhood!,” the manager told sales reps to encourage stronger doses in conversations with doctors. The manager wrote, “He who sells 40mg,” which was the largest dose at the time, “will win the battle.” Internal memos referred to sales staff as “crusaders” and “knights” and executives as the “Royal Court of OxyContin.”
Purdue and its sales team convinced doctors of the safety of OxyContin. For decades, many doctors had been reluctant to prescribe opioids because they were addictive and not meant to be used for chronic pain. But part of the selling point for OxyContin was the claim that one dose lasted 12 hours, as opposed to eight hours or fewer, so it could be taken less frequently. Purdue also claimed to have reduced the dangerous side effects and addictive qualities of oxycodone. Purdue claimed OxyContin was safe.
Purdue sales reps aggressively reached out to doctors. The company hosted conferences for medical professionals under the guise that the presentations were educational. Purdue produced promotional videos that described how the fear of opioids has created obstacles for the compassionate care of patients. Doctors who were paid by Purdue appeared in the videos to promote this cause. In one video, a doctor stated, “There’s no question that our best, strongest pain medicines are the opioids.” The company’s annual spending on medical journal advertising increased from $700,000 in 1996 to $4.6 million in 2001. In 1997, doctors wrote more than 670,000 OxyContin prescriptions for non-cancer pain. In 2002, the number of prescriptions for OxyContin increased to more than 6.2 million.
In 2007, the company and three executives pleaded guilty to criminal charges that they misled regulators, doctors, and patients about the risks of OxyContin and its addictive qualities. Purdue paid more than $600 million in fines and other payments. The three executives paid a total of $34.5 million in fines. In a statement in response to the lawsuit, the company said, “Nearly six years and longer ago, some employees made, or told other employees to make, certain statements about OxyContin to some health care professionals that were inconsistent with the F.D.A.-approved prescribing information for OxyContin and the express warnings it contained about risks associated with the medicine.” The statement continued, “We accept responsibility for those past misstatements and regret that they were made.”
Purdue was also sued by several states in 2007. The company began funding programs to prevent pharmacy robberies and introduced a version of the pill that was more difficult to crush and snort. But the company did not address how addictive the product could be as sales of OxyContin continued to reach new heights.
Facing increased public scrutiny, along with additional lawsuits, Purdue has made compromises in its business tactics. In February 2018, the company announced that it would no longer market OxyContin to doctors and will lay off half of its sales team. In a statement, the company said, “We have restructured and significantly reduced our commercial operation and will no longer be promoting opioids to prescribers.” But many expressed doubts about Purdue’s motivations. Andrew Kolodny, co-director of the Opioid Policy Research Collaborative at Brandeis University, stated, “I don’t think that this is coming out of good intentions. I think that sales for OxyContin have already been declining,” adding, “There is generic competition.”
In March 2018, photographer Nan Goldin led a protest in the Sackler Wing at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. This is one of many spaces at art museums around the world where the Sackler family has donated money. Goldin, whose work has documented drug addiction, said she was addicted to OxyContin from 2014 to 2017. At the protest, she shouted, “We are artists, activists, addicts. We are fed up.” She led the crowding chanting, “Sacklers lie; people die.”
Others have shared their experiences with OxyContin. In a deposition, a man from Alabama stated, “I was more or less just a zombie.” A woman from Florida said, “I thought I had to be nuts… I am really falling apart from the anxiety.” The city of Everett, Washington is one of many cities suing Purdue. Mayor Ray Stephanson said, “Our community has been significantly damaged, and we need to be made whole.” The lawsuit accuses Purdue of “knowingly, recklessly, and/or negligently supplying OxyContin to obviously suspicious physicians and pharmacies and enabling the illegal diversion of OxyContin into the black market, including to drug rings, pill mills, and other dealers for dispersal of the highly addictive pills in Everett.”
While sales of OxyContin have been down since its height in 2010, the popularity of the drug has created new problems with how to deal with addiction across the country. In addition to the millions of legal prescriptions from doctors, OxyContin trickled down to black markets and led to an increase in the use of heroin and other opiod drugs.
As of May 2018, Purdue faces potential lawsuits filed by 14 states and hundreds of cities. These lawsuits allege the company misrepresented the risk of OxyContin and created an expensive public health crisis that taxpayers have had to handle. Purdue has contended in court filings that federal law prohibits states from holding the company liable because the FDA approved OxyContin as a painkiller with warnings about addiction risks. The company also contends that it is not liable if patients misuse its products.