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Nova · Professor Researcher · re-ranking top 20…

Johanna Catherine Maclean

Verified

University of Pennsylvania · Rehabilitation Medicine

Active 2006–2024

h-index38
Citations4.5k
Papers23586 last 5y
Funding
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Research topics

  • Business
  • Economics
  • Medicine
  • Internal medicine

Selected publications

  • Economic Studies on the Opioid Crisis: A Review

    2020 · 87 citations

    1st authorCorresponding
    • Economics
    • Business
    • Medicine

    The United States has experienced an unprecedented crisis related to the misuse of and addiction to opioids. As of 2018, 128 Americans die each day of an opioid overdose, and total economic costs associated with opioid misuse are estimated to be more than $500 billion annually. The crisis has evolved in three phases, starting in the 1990s and continuing through 2010 with a massive increase in use of prescribed opioids associated with lax prescribing regulations and aggressive marketing efforts by the pharmaceutical industry. A second phase included tightening restrictions on prescribed opioids, reformulation of some commonly misused prescription medications, and a shift to heroin consumption over the period 2010 to 2013. Since 2013, the third phase of the crisis has included a movement towards synthetic opioids, especially fentanyl, and a continued tightening of opioid prescribing regulations, along with the growth of both harm reduction and addiction treatment access policies. Economic research, using innovative frameworks, causal methods, and rich data, has added to our understanding of the causes and consequences of the crisis. This body of research also identifies intended and unintended impacts of policies designed to address the crisis. Although there is general agreement that the causes of the crisis include a combination of supply-and demand-side factors, and interactions between them, there is less consensus regarding the relative importance of each. Studies show that regulations can reduce opioid prescribing but may have less impact on root causes of the crisis and, in some cases, have spillover effects resulting in greater use of more harmful substances obtained in illicit markets, where regulation is less possible. There are effective opioid use disorder treatments available, but access, stigma, and cost hurdles have stifled utilization, resulting in a large degree of under-treatment in the U.S.

Frequent coauthors

  • Michael F. Pesko

    University of Missouri

    97 shared
  • Charles Courtemanche

    69 shared
  • Dhaval Dave

    Bentley University

    58 shared
  • Joseph J. Sabia

    San Diego State University

    56 shared
  • Samuel Safford

    Michigan State University

    55 shared
  • Rahi Abouk

    54 shared
  • Bo Feng

    Shanghai East Hospital

    53 shared
  • Abigail S. Friedman

    Yale New Haven Health System

    52 shared
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