tv Documentary RT July 23, 2020 1:30am-2:00am EDT
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so look for common ground. always the issue of trying to playing out in the american election cycle. betray themselves as being tough and beijing maybe they are at least rhetorically but reality those are very different story and it's bipartisan the committee creates an industry in finance 40 china for day one of the bridges to show is this china. and in the 1996 something happened different a company called purdue pharmaceuticals came out with a drug called oxycontin and they started a mere and falsely promoted that opioids were rarely addict maybe only one percent of the time could you get addicted to it no. that was not true. and it is
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not true and never was true that was a false statement and the other companies jumped on the bandwagon of making money and the false lies spread and the false marketing spread that they are guilty of lying about these tricks they cause this. i believe that with every fiber of my being. back in 1906 the 1st promotional campaign for it was broadcast and we found it. we doctors were wrong in thinking that opioids can't be used long term they can be and they should be we used to think they'd stop working all the patients would become addicts or they'd be sedated and. these 6 cases show how wrong those fears were. in this little film the public was
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assured with certification the content would show no risk of a. despite its high concentration in opium. this treatment usually reserved for patients. with. really enjoyed my say. pain medication i have not missed one day of work and this medication does not turn you into a zombie it is turned me into an active person again. whereas addiction is the 1st. farmer a purely reliable some patients may be afraid of taking opioids because they are perceived as too strong or addictive but that is far from actual fact.
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less than one percent of patients taking opioids actually become addicted. since 1988 doctors who fits their patients developing addiction and yet in this internal memo the laboratory keeps on encouraging us representatives to sell the cost that miracle pill using bonuses premiums and all sorts of gadgets in only 5 years oxycontin went from 600000 prescriptions a year to more than 6000000. nowadays 30 pharma is the 1st company standing it was used in the lawsuit filed by the state of oklahoma in order to prove its responsibility the team relies on dock to kalani. in the 1st 6 years of the release of oxycontin produced sponsored 20000 educational programs across the united states they gave money to the professional societies to
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advocate for more opioids the organization that regulates hospitals took money from them the organization that regulates doctors in different states took money from them from all of these different directions we were told to prescribe much more the opioid lobby the manufacturers and distributors of opioids spent 880000000 dollars over a 10 year period the walking efforts for more cautious prescribing that they spent 8 times more than the gun lobby in the united states in has spent in trying to block gun regulations. the manufacturers of opiates are spending more money trying to block regulations on opioids. and is disseminated year after year during that time the epidemic takes root hidden in the shadows for so long the addiction of a 1000000 american citizens suddenly comes to light his days with the most people
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showing up for treatment saying they're addicted to the pills show up as red on the road. and this is 99. 2001. 2003. 200-520-0720 extension 09 what you can see is that in every state in the united states we've seen a very sharp increase in the number of people seeking treatment for addiction to prescription opioids big companies were aware that these pills were dangerous addictive of course and could kill people of course they would yes they were aware before they put out their drug and when the drug started to get prescribed it was very clear early on there was a public health problem associated with this so there was overwhelming evidence
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that the products that were making them rich were killing people. back and we wanted to find the patients that testified in this that really johnny passed away in 2008 in an accident caused by oxycontin his wife confided he had become addicted to it lauren was addicted for years now she's free if it became addicted and was also found dead of a cardiac arrest 3 patients out of 6 had become addicted as for the doctor who appeared in the film here is his answer. it's not acceptable to say i don't believe in using strong pain medications for chronic pain we need to stop saying this. or.
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that we follow it thank you for the mil who we have we love you so much. over and all my family in jesus christ i'm a pray same at. 66 you hear me in chelsea came here a lot but i just feel like she's here with me every time i come here i just feel her presence you know it makes me shine if i was trouble with this whole it's a daily thing you gotta let it go people say you have to let it go tell us tell us how you do time don't know. if it happened to one person you know ok it was an accident this is 5. that's right . i mean i don't know what our thinking miles i really don't i would like to know what your thinking was how did she think that was helping. chelsea was 21 when she
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passed away the same age as kyle who still struggling for his life. kyle has begun his 1st days of therapy at the center. in his struggle against the addiction only speech seems to be the hyper serenity. so what i want to do is incorporate a little bit the stuff that we this morning. every single one of us through. all of us have to see this through. several of the guys that are in here. after it's. they got injured dad introduced him to the opiates and whenever they take the opiates they find out hey not only does this make me physically feel better but emotionally i feel better . so what of opiates.
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made me feel like a better person or. like i'd be in the house all day and then once i got high i could go out. when they were on a new. everybody else here is still the same thing and you know i can relate to a lot of these people stories and it's just. a lot of a lot of love i don't feel alone anymore so. that's that's going to feel lot better .
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on day 15 of his treatment col relapsed. one of the patients who brought in heroin secretly. he couldn't resist. after he plunged back he was sent to this facility. monitored under high surveillance away from his family and son he's following his treatment to be able to go back to the ranch. here every fall we thank you for this day look we think this we're about to receive we
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think this is just being on a 4 year stretch with it and i just can't seem to stop and. yeah it's highly addictive. why is it so hard to be sober because you have pain and. this is just now i'm so over i have feelings and. i mean to see how i would just pass out. they may be. carried on. me went to church this morning you know the. problem. oh ok.
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i'm well it's almost 12 so i'm going to run by and pick up cash and come out there to you so you can spend some time with him. good luck. to and i'll give you a call here after a little bit. ok bye. he said on better. his relationship with me his relationship with his brother his relationship with the son karl's burned every bridge possible. even though he's her us the most way so have to be someone else to be there for him and we don't there's times that we don't want to sell we have to set our feelings aside and support him. i think the really the
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most difficult as far as anger is the stuff is just knowing. all the all these companies know what their jobs are doing and they will say it they they're like oh our joys are so hopeful when the ruling more lives in the world and. all hope no crowd. no shots. actually dealt. with drug no 1st to a. point sure thirst for action. the world is driven by drama shaped by one person or those.
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who dares thinks. we dare to ask. i think the only time we've ever had any sort of opiates in the house was after my surgery last year. and at that time we knew about kyle is way ahead yeah we had. yeah i assured my mom when you let me take the microscope and i was so scared that's what they prescribe him he had the same exact stuff that my brother got addicted to oxy. cause. which the street name for that is roxy if you. just heroin according to my brother there you were addicting.
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and he had legitimate surgery and i freaked out i was like no you can't take these and here he had just had his appendix taken out he needed the hump and i didn't want him taking them because i wasn't going to go through this again. just like calls family the whole country is in a state of awareness wanting to change things and contain the epidemic. at the oklahoma university and then seen an aggressive alliance was formed researcher andrew kalani lawyer ritchie with me and dr jason b.
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then they've all gathered to establish a common fight plan against every single laboratory. case. dr beaman has created the 1st college education program of the country on painkillers addiction. and also what provide education to all of the prescribers from dentists doctors and bad areas right then and there. we think that that will do more to the result you were describing than any of our other initiatives i think the overwhelming response has been that the doctors that are graduating now and going out into practice are not person writing things and we've. seen over 20 percent decline in prescriptions in oklahoma over the last 2 years my medical students will never be involved in this overprescribing behavior and there are definitely some doctors have knowingly contributed to this problem they saw an
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opportunity to make money and they went for it but that's that's a very small minority. as department of justice is also trying to stop those who are responsible like one of the richest families in the country the one that funds and controls the purse and hire. article i want to show you that appeared for bush about the sackler family and back in 201514 bay and one of the richest families in the united states and they've sold more than 35. dollars worth of since it was really just. boarded 952 by the secular brothers. until then their name was known to the general public nowadays billionaires and very much appreciated by. the made itself known as the patrons of museums such as the movie the guggenheim but without anyone making
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the connection between their fortune and their company michael barrett intends to make this truth. do you think they knew what they were doing sure they knew what they were doing. their exactly what they were doing they pleaded guilty to crimes for alternately with and. knowingly crossing the north of the oxycontin that's resulted in the one thing for sure that they were my. i mean billions of dollars and they didn't hear who destroyed it what damage it caused in 2007 the company pleaded guilty to the federal accusations of misleading marketing and false advertising condemned they can. over $635000000.00 in penalties and continue to sell opioids. the sack clothes would never have been able to market this product without or through isolation the f.d.a. has to control and regulate every single drug put on the market it authorized the
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use of oxycontin as a painkiller without a problem. some of the same f.d.a. officials involved in regulating the drug. would wind up leaving f.d.a. and taking higher paying jobs for purdue pharma and other drug companies we call that the revolving door i think they should have figured out earlier than what was going on in to this day some of these same f.d.a. officials are still at the f.d.a. and rather than saying we made a horrible mistake we have to change our policies they haven't changed their policies they keep approving more opioids. it's a big day for oklahoma the attorney general's teams are facing the lawyers of the 4 companies being seated a judge has to rule whether there's enough evidence to go to trial. approved
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pharmaceutical activists johnson and johnson we sued the ones that we. did business and falsely marketed in oklahoma my goal is to let the truth come out i really hope this case goes to trial it's an enormous amount of money and they're going to fight to the death is what they've been able. to to try to show that they didn't cause us they're probably going to blame this on doctors and they're probably going to blame it on people like myself who got sick. we've probably got at least $20.00 for you know they have a insta spend on the fancy billions to spend on lawyers and they have no limit on what they'll spin in these cases and ship lawyer they are here from the east coast and they try other the law as much as they can. it takes
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years of investigation and hearings for the course of history to change but the time to reckoning is common for the 1st time full napper tories will be judged. as being responsible for the crisis. one day i think they would like us to stop. and go away but we're not we can't wait it's trial may of 2019 we're going to tee up for trial and we're looking forward to it we believe in our case i believe in our case with every fiber of my being and i look forward to trying this case if i were the 1st case in the nation set for trial and we've been getting calls from other states we will set the precedent if i will might some history on that matter . good history. the lawyers of the fall laboratories duchesse despite our repeated demands for now none of them has accepted to meet with us. they were smiling how does that make you feel. bad for
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my party to see i'm not sure. that's a better answer to that that's not. just a mouth. that on ever. and that was. all. i don't know what spin of all. since you were boyish. please you are scared of getting hooked on drugs. that's my biggest worry are now occurring that i think. it's been 3 months since cali integrated the ranch told his dad he is coming to an end he now has to leave find a new routine where paying calloused don't exist. now that i'm sober an awful lot
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better more confident. like my body doesn't hurt. healthy. after he left the ranch called moved in with his mother for a while. he's now found a job and rents a flat where he can accommodate his son every day is a struggle. this is the final battle the one that gets to decide the fate of nicole. her lawyer asked for just muscle of counts. the state of oklahoma once the lawsuit to go before a criminal court. i think she acted extraordinarily recklessly so what my goal is
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is to berks file a motion to allow that jury to hear all the other victims that died as a result from that which is off so the jury can get a picture of what she was doing here and there are many. women died as it was why should anyone outside of medication and each one especially diabetic. you think to be evidence has absolutely failed to show. this is. the law is very clear about what is a murder case and what isn't on there's other cases and. frankly with all the egregious conduct in this. meeting you just see that make those or you just dismissed it so are you confident. you're waiting for the doctor. should be brought in and could we have an interview with her maybe later as soon as the case dismissed you.
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all along the hearing dr nichols seems detached from the events surrounding her but they can look on her face she will never speak as if none of this were her concern . the judge has reached a ruling. dr nichols will be tried for murder. it's an exceptional decision on the part of the american justice system the trial has to happen in a year or less from now on she's banned from practicing. nichols on her lawyer have decided to plead not guilty. i think it's a good thing she's going to have to get a course in how to answer for what she did wrong. it's going to have to answer in
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front of the jury and i know he added a manslaughter or better at least he didn't dismiss and she deserves she deserves you know to go before a jury trial see and see what's going to happen with their you know my daughter to serve that they used to prescribe all kinds of dangerous drugs that we now know are dangerous about at the time they were doing the best they could to treat their patients and now they're blaming one of their own victims. for doing the best she could with the medical knowledge she. will love you. and miss you. i miss you hear me. i believe you hear me.
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chills see. mr ford. through this is i can survive i can smile and say help somebody else. that's what i see if you're. ok i forget her. eyes you're really do your she hears everything i forgive i do i hear you here. since that case happened dozens of american doctors have been sentenced in a court of law for over prescribing opioids. and $27.00 states is suing the laboratories for financial losses that purge you former company is now looking for new claims for its opioid it has created subsidiaries in asia and south america. everywhere opioid consumption is on
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if. syria has been engulfed in civil war for almost 10 years it's cost hundreds of thousands of lives and displaced millions more no $1.00 foresaw the peaceful protests of 20 of them is collating into a complex conflict between various armies geopolitical interests rebel groups and jihadists. but if you have a list of you say in the hague because i'm. best at the short let's call. it a deep going to lick. one. because the lack of honesty of
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a. and all the new i sat down i. never started i was the mother in the in the shade but i lean on mr hague and they show up to hear. the world health organization europe might once again become a hot spots of the covert 900 pandemic just weeks after countries started reopening their doors to tourists also. life which is here for you from the u.s. city of portland this is the scene after president donald trump sent in troops to stamp out nearly 2 months of anti racism protests there he is slamming the unrest in cities right across the country.
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