As the opioid crisis in the United States evolved, so did the relationship between prescribers and pharmaceutical companies that manufacture prescription opioids, with policymakers at both the state and national levels focused on the issue of prescription opioid misuse. This article discusses the role of the prescriber-pharmaceutical company relationship with respect to opioid over- and underprescribing, the evolution of that relationship over time, and its contribution to what is now commonly known as the U.S. opioid crisis or overdose epidemic. The United States saw several "waves" of prescription opioid misuse, and this article characterizes the relationship between prescribers and pharmaceutical companies in similar waves. The article proposes several prescriber- and manufacturer-focused "solutions" that can be implemented to address and lessen the effects of the ongoing crisis. Changes directed at prescribers and manufacturers must be implemented in tandem to ensure such solutions do not, in attempting to fill the existing cracks in the system, create even more.
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