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Emily Dufton, "Addiction, Inc: Medication-assisted Treatment and America's Forgotten War on Drugs" (U Chicago Press, 2026)

Feb 18, 2026
Emily Dufton, historian of U.S. drug policy and author of Addiction, Inc., explores how medication-assisted treatment (MAT) rose from Nixon-era public clinics to a profitable, privatized industry. She traces methadone and buprenorphine’s origins, commercialization pitfalls, criminal justice impacts, and contrasts U.S. fragmentation with more humane systems abroad.
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INSIGHT

Nixon's Forgotten Treatment Agenda

  • Nixon's June 17, 1971 announcement launched a nationalized treatment effort reporting directly to the White House and funding clinics nationwide.
  • The initiative treated addiction as public health, not solely criminal justice, marking an unusual federal commitment to treatment.
ANECDOTE

DC Clinics That Shaped Policy

  • Emily Dufton recounts Dr. Robert DuPont's Washington, D.C. clinics that reduced heroin use, overdoses, and crime in the late 1960s.
  • DuPont's local success directly influenced Nixon's decision to scale clinics nationwide under CEODAP.
INSIGHT

Buprenorphine's Promise And Privatized Failure

  • Buprenorphine (Suboxone) unshackled opioid maintenance from specialized clinics by allowing office-based prescribing and pharmacy pickup.
  • Its promise was undermined when manufacturers and private providers commercialized and exploited the market, limiting public-health impact.
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