Opioid abuse -- Great Britain : Horizon. Addicted to painkillers? : Britain's opioid crisis / filmed, produced and directed by Dan Murdoch ; Wingspan Productions for BBC
Opioid abuse -- Prevention -- Government policy : Medications for opioid use disorder save lives / Committee on Medication-Assisted Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder ; Alan I. Leshner and Michelle Mancher, editors ; Board on Health Sciences Policy, Health and Medicine Division
Opioid abuse -- Treatment -- Cost effectiveness : Pharmacotherapies for the treatment of opioid dependence : efficacy, cost-effectiveness, and implementation guidelines / edited by Richard P. Mattick, Robert Ali, Nicholas Lintzeris
Opioid abuse -- Treatment -- United States -- Congresses : Advancing therapeutic development for pain and opioid use disorders through public-private partnerships : proceedings of a workshop / Lisa Bain, Sheena M. Posey Norris, and Clare Stroud, rapporteurs ; Forum on Neuroscience and Nervous System Disorders, Board on Health Sciences Policy, Health and Medicine Division, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, Medicine
Opioid abuse -- United States -- Congresses : Integrating responses at the intersection of opioid use disorder and infectious disease epidemics : proceedings of a workshop / Anna Nicholson, rapporteur ; Board on Population Health and Public Health Practice, Health and Medicine Division, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, Medicine
The endogenous peptides with opiate-like activity. The three major classes currently recognized are the ENKEPHALINS, the DYNORPHINS, and the ENDORPHINS. Each of these families derives from different precursors, proenkephalin, prodynorphin, and PRO-OPIOMELANOCORTIN, respectively. There are also at least three classes of OPIOID RECEPTORS, but the peptide families do not map to the receptors in a simple way