Introduction
HookedRx: From Prescription to Addiction takes a close, compassionate look at Arizona’s opioid crisis by sharing the stories of the people who confront it every day. The documentary features frontline workers who respond to overdoses and support those caught in active addiction, policymakers working to repair gaps in a strained system, and counsellors helping individuals piece their lives back together. It also includes powerful voices from parents who have lost children and people who have made it to the other side of recovery, offering a full picture of both the heartbreak and the hope within this crisis.
HookedRx traces how addiction often begins with a prescription that seems harmless at first, only to escalate into dependence and, for many, devastating consequences. It sheds light on how easily these pills were obtained and uncovers troubling stories about medical professionals who misused their prescribing power. Through honest storytelling and firsthand accounts, HookedRx reveals how the crisis took hold in Arizona and why change—both systemic and community-led—is urgently needed.
Quotes from HookedRx: From Prescription to Addiction
“We are killing more people by prescription drugs and a large percentage of them are opioids prescribed by doctors. And we’ve also seen that a large percentage of people that get addicted to these prescription-type opioids often resort to heroin. Opioid and prescription drug related deaths have increased every year for the last 5 years. It’s a growing problem, it’s something that needs to be addressed, and it’s getting worse every year.”
“This is an epidemic that isn’t hidden, it’s not somewhere far, far away. It’s right in our own backyards, our own neighbourhoods, our own schools, and it’s something we’re either going to address as leaders, parents, and policymakers, or we’re going to see more kids die and more avoidable deaths.”
“We’re prescribing a lot more opiates than we ever used to before. Opiates were thought to be fairly safe, so a lot of different practitioners we’re prescribing opiates for various pain. So as that trend continued on and on, we were seeing more and more patients that had developed addiction to opiates.”

“Being sober and staying sober wouldn’t be such an amazing celebration if we didn’t realize that the other alternative is death.”
MARISA RODRIGUEZ
“Once you’ve tried your drug of choice, you try and catch the same high you got the first time, but you never do. So I took 26 Percocet’s in two hours, so I OD’d. But I didn’t actually go to the hospital over it, which was kind of weird. I never really sought medical attention because I didn’t want to get red-flagged and not be able to get the pills, to be honest. It’s not a fun feeling to know that you’re going to die over a drug, something that you could have prevented.”
“The pill bottle says 1-2 every 4-6 hours, so I’m going to take 2 every 4. I’m going to push those limits because I like the way that it makes me feel. It doesn’t just take away the pain, it makes your whole life seem like it’s amazing.”

“It is no longer an inner city versus suburban problem – it’s everybody’s problem. I’ve worked in multiple different emergency departments from inner city to suburban to rural and everyone has this problem. It does not discriminate against gender, age, income. This has hit everyone.”
“There’s no difference in what I was doing that the people on the street do with their heroin every day. They go to somebody on the street corner with dope and I was going to my doctor and he was writing me the prescriptions.”
“I remember I had shoulder surgery, and I remember convincing the doctor to give me more and then going in about a month later and him just writing a prescription liberally for the next three months, and I wasn’t in pain anymore. But the excitement that I got that the doctor was giving me refills on my pain medication meant that all summer long, I was going to be able to abuse these.”
“This is a horrific disease that needs to be treated, can be treated. Recovery does happen. And so I want there to be some hope. And I think in the long run if you’re able to survive it, you come out a stronger, more compassionate person.”
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