Attacking the prescription drug problem, one day at a time

Republishing Guidelines

Yes, unless otherwise noted, you’re welcome to republish InvestigateWest’s original articles and photographs for free, as long as you follow a few simple conditions:

  • You must credit both the author and InvestigateWest in the byline. We prefer: “Author Name, InvestigateWest.”
  • You have to include the tagline provided at the end of the article, which typically reads, “InvestigateWest (investigatewest.org) is an independent news nonprofit dedicated to investigative journalism in the Pacific Northwest. Visit investigatewest.org/newsletters to sign up for weekly updates.”
  • You can write your own headlines as long as they accurately reflect the story.
  • You may not edit our work except to reflect your own editorial style or to update time references (changing “yesterday” to “last week,” for instance).
  • You may use InvestigateWest artwork (photos, illustrations, etc.) ONLY if you publish them alongside the stories with which they originally appeared and do not alter them. You may not separate multimedia elements for standalone use.
  • If you share our stories on social media, we’d appreciate it if you tag us in your posts.

Keep in mind: InvestigateWest sometimes republishes articles from other news outlets and we have no authority to grant republication permission. These stories are identifiable by their bylines and other credits.

We send story alerts to editors at news outlets across the Northwest. Let us know if you want to be included on that list. Questions? Contact us at editors@investigatewest.org.

Copy this

Montana is putting together a drug crime unit targeted at prescription drug abuse, funded by a new Justice Department grant.  But with few treatment resources, there are few places to divert abusers, authorities concede.

Last year, 321 Montanans died of prescription drug overdoses, compared to 229 killed in automobile accidents, the Missoulian reports. Drug deaths trumped traffic deaths in five other western states, as InvestigateWest reported here last week, and 11 other states across the nation.

In Montana, the money will be used to both educate the public and keep drug abusers out of the regular criminal system.

In many cases it's a matter of educating doctors and patients. Pain medication isn't the answer to every physical problem, and unfortunately, too many patients have been conditioned to expect it, and too many doctors give in to that expectation,  in part because of a culture that teaches quick fixes, and in part because of  heavy advertising by pharmaceutical companies that push their products on consumers.

-- Rita Hibbard

Get the inside scoop in your inbox, free.

Subscribe to our weekly newsletters and never miss an investigation.

Great! You’ve successfully signed up.

Welcome back! You've successfully signed in.

You've successfully subscribed to InvestigateWest.

Success! Check your email for magic link to sign-in.

Success! Your billing info has been updated.

Your billing was not updated.