This does not mesh with reality in states like West Virginia, where drug companies sent 9 million pills in two years to a town with less than 400 people - 780 million pills in six years to a state with 1.8 million people.
As the "crackdown" revved up in these states, more people have died as they've turned to replace their prescription habit with heroin, and street heroin is increasingly being laced with fentanyl analogs which cause nearly instant overdoses.
Not pinning this on the drug companies or doctors that are handing out these drugs like candy to anyone willing to write a check is putting the blame way downstream of where it belongs. The DEA sure can crackdown on marijuana and molly but Rx drug abuse? Move along, citizen. Nothing to see here.