Expert: America's 'legacy of racism' led to a broken drug treatment system

This post has been updated.

As the U.S. continues dealing with the opioid crisis, some experts argue that the American drug treatment system must reckon with its ingrained prejudices before properly tackling the problem.

“It’s the legacy of slavery, it’s the legacy of racism, it’s the segregation,” Tracie Gardner, vice president for policy advocacy at the Legal Action Center in New York, told Yahoo Finance. “And the idea that people, because of their skin color, are somehow less or different.”

Dr. Allison Lynch, director of addiction medicine at the University of Iowa, noted that “racism has been a major problem in American culture since the beginning, and so it has influenced everything in our society. There’s definitely very easy-to-identify examples of how racism has impacted substance use treatment.”

Fentanyl deaths have spiked over recent years. (Graphic: David Foster/Yahoo Finance)
Fentanyl deaths have spiked over recent years. (Graphic: David Foster/Yahoo Finance)

Lynch added that now that “there’s more white people who have drug addiction, we’re getting more money and more attention paid to drug addiction treatment. Before it was often viewed as a problem in urban communities, which is group-speak for minority populations. I can’t think of anything in our country that isn’t influenced by our culture of racism, and substance use treatment definitely has been influenced by that, absolutely. Today, at this minute, our system is influenced by racism.”

Lynch, Gardner, and other experts detailed how institutional racism — as it relates to lack of access to treatment, stigmas related to mental health, flawed hospital procedures, and insurance industry practices — can help explain America's struggle with combatting the evolving opioid crisis.

“The addiction treatment system, it’s not even that it’s broken — it never worked, because it was based all along on ideas of the people who would be using,” Gardner said. “And it was people we don’t care about, people who deserve to die, people who don’t deserve to have good health care, people who deserve to feel pain.”

‘She looked at me with these pleading eyes’

A 2018 study that found white Americans were twice as likely to be prescribed an opioid than black Americans due to racial stereotyping by doctors, who tended to worry that their black patients would become addicted to the medication.

That meant that fewer black patients became addicted: separate study from the journal Epidemiology that found an estimated 14,000 more black Americans would have died from opioid overdose if they had been prescribed opioids at the same rate as white Americans.

Nevertheless, the system’s apparent bias is generally a negative for black Americans: A study from the University of Michigan found that white populations were nearly 35 times as likely to receive treatment for opioid addiction than black Americans, even though there are similar rates of opioid addiction among different racial backgrounds.