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Quinn Chasan's avatar

Subscribed to comment. I spent a large part of the 2015-2020 era working on the opioid epidemic with state governments. I met with probably 30+ state health directors about modernizing their systems for opioid response.

I've written about my experience drawing a parallel to the MN Feed Our Families fraud (https://open.substack.com/pub/socialdawn/p/the-banal-fraud-of-minnesota) because I think it's a good comparison in some respects.

The truth of the matter is that public health depts in Dem run states were absolutely concerned with cracking down on pill mill drs and clawing funds from bad actors in pharma (good). But then the epidemic moved to hard drugs, synthetics, and fentanyl and with that move the states lost visibility into the problem (bad) and have never fixed it.

They could have turned to law enforcement as a better proxy but they did not. My experience with these states was that they did not take it nearly as seriously as they should have. Public health officials were happy to spend money on a wide range of programs but despite cataclysmic deaths there was a surprising lack of urgency. In New Hampshire, for example, the health agency CIO actually killed the project because of his discomfort in combining healthcare and public health media data in a single analytics system.

The people are not wrong for reacting like this. Cracking down on the criminal supply chain is still an unsolved problem esp at the state level. And once the issue moved out of the neat ICD codes, Medicare SORs, and PDMPs then States lost visibility and really lost interest in solving from the public health agency level.

ScienceGrump's avatar

I find that people with economics backgrounds tend to be really sharp and alert to flawed causal arguments... except in economics. The basic techniques in this paper for converting correlation into causation are, basically, a bullshit generating engine. The fact that they're standard practice in economics is why economics writ large is a bullshit generating engine. TBC, I can totally believe that opioids made people more Republican, because I buy the larger argument that public disorder drives a conservative authoritarian backlash. I just don't believe that the incredibly contrived pseudorandomization in this white paper - cancer rates in the 90s! - does anything at all to resolve the causal structure and I desperately wish people would stop crediting this approach.

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