The numbers are sobering: tens of thousands of Americans who die each year from abuse of the class of pain-relief drugs known as opioids. What’s much-lesser known is the human toll of suffering and death that opioid abuse wreaks on communities.

It is a problem not confined to what many might believe are the usual suspects. Opioid abuse is distressingly common across barriers of urban and rural, or rich and poor. It involves both abuse of legally prescribed drugs and illegal use of similar substances sold via clandestine trafficking.

Law enforcement and health care leaders have each strongly sounded warnings of the crisis, and their words deserve to be heded by all of us. Overdose deaths should not have claimed 64,000 Americans, as happened last year.

There has been some movement, in Georgia and elsewhere, to more aggressively address widespread drug addiction that leaves too many dead, incarcerated, or otherwise a drain on society. More can, and should, be done.

On this page today, we present three viewpoints on opioid abuse and its societal consequences. The writers eloquently describe the problem and point out practical strategies toward gaining control of this societal scourge.

Their advice deserves consideration, and should be followed-up with action by policymakers in Georgia, and elsewhere.

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Lolita Griffeth (center), Cornelius Taylor’s fiancee, speaks during a rally for Taylor in front of City Hall on Monday, Oct. 6, 2025, in Atlanta. Taylor was killed during a sweep of an encampment of unhoused residents earlier this year. (Arvin Temkar/AJC)

Credit: Arvin Temkar/AJC

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The renovation of Jekyll Island's Great Dunes golf course includes nine holes designed by Walter Travis in the 1920s for the members of the Jekyll Island Club. Several holes that were part of the original layout where located along the beach and were bulldozed in the 1950s.(Photo by Austin Kaseman)

Credit: Photo by Austin Kaseman