Letter to the Editor

A New Trade War with an Opium Component: Can the U.S. Opioids Crisis Be Solved by Banning Fentanyl in China?

Abstract

No Abstract

1. Windle J (2013). Harms caused by China's 1906-17 opium suppression intervention. Int J Drug Policy,24(5):498-505.
2. Lyapustina T, Rutkow L, Chang HY, et al (2016). Effect of a "pill mill" law on opioid prescribing and utilization: The case of Texas. Drug Alcohol Depend,159:190-7.
3. Beletsky L, Davis CS (2017). Today's fentanyl crisis: Prohibition's Iron Law, revisited. Int J Drug Policy, 46:156-9.
4. Hem PE, Hem E (2012). Regulations with plenty of loopholes--the doctors' prescription rights during the era of prohibition 1916-1926. Tidsskr Nor Laegeforen, 132(23-24):2636-40.
5. Livingston MD, Barnett TE, Delcher C, Wagenaar AC (2017). Recreational Cannabis Legalization and Opioid-Related Deaths in Colorado, 2000-2015. Am J Public Health, 107(11):1827-9.
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IssueVol 50 No 11 (2021) QRcode
SectionLetter to the Editor
DOI https://doi.org/10.18502/ijph.v50i11.7595

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How to Cite
1.
Sun W, Breslin T. A New Trade War with an Opium Component: Can the U.S. Opioids Crisis Be Solved by Banning Fentanyl in China?. Iran J Public Health. 2021;50(11):2347-2348.