About the Book
For decades, our country’s main solution to the drug crisis has been rehab. So why hasn’t it worked? The answer is that in America, anyone can get addicted, but only certain people get a real chance to recover. Amid high rates of overdose death, lawmakers’ default response is to punish, while rehabs across the country exploit patients for profit and fail to provide the resources they need to actually recover. We’ve heard a great deal about Big Pharma’s role in foisting the opioid crisis upon America, but, until now, we’ve heard little about the other side of this epidemic—a treatment system that often fuels relapse instead of recovery.
In this propulsive, narrative-driven exposé, Shoshana Walter follows four people through the underbelly of the treatment industry, exposing the failures and missteps in our government’s response to the crisis.
We follow a white, middle-class kid from Louisiana who enters a rehab that forces him to perform backbreaking unpaid labor at chemical plants and oil refineries. A black mom from Philadelphia who gets forced prayer and jail time instead of treatment. A grandmother in Los Angeles who seeks justice for her own son’s overdose death by obsessively rooting out corruption in the for-profit rehab industry. And an Indiana doctor who tries to treat addicted patients but instead is arrested and jailed by the DEA.
Together, these stories illustrate the pitfalls of a uniquely American system that too often fails to meet the needs of people with addiction, contributing to a deadly cycle of relapse and overdose. They also offer insight into how we might fix that system and save lives.