A White House campaign designed to address the opioid epidemic is not diverse enough, critics tell U.S. News & World Report.
The campaign, “Opioids: The Crisis Next Door,” features many middle-class, white people, according to Ingrid Walker, a drug policy researcher at the University of Washington-Tacoma. “A lot of them seem to be Christian, a lot of them were very supportive of President Trump, so it felt like it was speaking to a base, to a certain extent,” she said. The website includes a video message from the president.
The campaign, launched in March 2018, urges people to share their experiences with opioid addiction and recovery.
“The face of the opioid crisis is not necessarily a white face. It is a really diverse face – a number of people from a number of different communities,” said Liz Chiarello, an assistant professor of sociology at Saint Louis University.
Heroin & the Opioid Epidemic: From Understanding to Action
Heroin and other opioids are ravaging communities across America. Heroin-related deaths increased by more than five times between 2010 and 2017, and drug deaths from fentanyl and other synthetic opioids are seeing a sharp rise as well.
Published
July 2019