Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ

Travis Rieder

Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ Author


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in The United States
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May 2019


Travis Rieder was born and raised in Indiana, after which he has slowly and steadily moved eastward. After completing his BA at Hanover College in southern Indiana, he moved to South Carolina to do an MA in philosophy. He then did a PhD in philosophy at Georgetown University before taking a faculty position at Johns Hopkins, where he currently teaches.

Travis’s writing is wide-ranging, but took a sharp turn in 2015 after a motorcycle accident and a traumatic experience with pain and pain management that resulted. Since that experience, he has worked to turn his intimate struggle with opioid painkillers into a research program and a mission to reduce harm from irresponsible prescribing. IN PAIN, published by HarperCollins in June 2019, combin
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Quotes by Travis Rieder  (?)
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“And since the higher-order values are the ones that more represent who the person is, an addiction is a genuine challenge to one’s identity in that it leads them to act contrary to what they care about.”
Travis Rieder, In Pain: A Bioethicist's Personal Struggle with Opioids

“brain, in other words, has an incredibly hard time doing what the rest of us do fairly effortlessly, which is aligning our desires with what we genuinely value.”
Travis Rieder, In Pain: A Bioethicist's Personal Struggle with Opioids

“When heroin was doing the most damage to communities of color, the American response was aggressive criminalization. It is not exactly a cutting edge analysis to point out that the war on drugs disproportionately affected black men. And now heroin has, mediated by pharmaceutical opioids, made its way into every nook and cranny of the United States, indiscriminately, killing white and non-white folks like, we're screaming alarm. Our response is outrage at any perpetrator we can find (pharma, for instance) and sympathy, for those caught up in the grips of addiction. Whereas we jumped at the chance to throw black men in jail for possessing small amounts of drugs or drug paraphernalia, now we have books like this one, discussing the need to get people, clean needles, a safe space to inject, and treatment when they're ready. It would take serious, mental, gymnastics to make one believe that this has nothing to do with it, especially in a country riddled with a history of racism.”
Travis Rieder, In Pain: A Bioethicist's Personal Struggle with Opioids

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