Tens of thousands of Americans die each year from opioid overdoses
The federal response remains sluggish and inadequate

THE GIRL looks like a typical teenager sitting on the bench of a fire station in Manchester, New Hampshire. But she is not. Just 19 years old, with acne still marking her face, she is here seeking help for opioid addiction. Already she has been hooked for four years. At 15 she started with Percocet, a prescription drug. Now homeless, these days she uses fentanyl, a cheap, synthetic opioid. After checking herself out of treatment two weeks ago, she went on a meth- and fentanyl-fuelled bender.
This article appeared in the Briefing section of the print edition under the headline “The death curve”

From the February 23rd 2019 edition
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The crypto industry is suddenly at the heart of American politics
Thank the Trump family’s investments, friendly regulators and lavish election spending

A glimpse inside Putin’s secret arms empire
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Russia is building up its forces, causing fear in its neighbours
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But China could calibrate a trade “quarantine” to limit unintended consequences
Can China sap a divided and isolated Taiwan of its will to resist?
Taiwanese are growing more doubtful that they can fend off their hostile neighbour