OIDA Symposium—Day 3: Histories and Stories of the Opioid Crisis
Event box
OIDA Symposium—Day 3: Histories and Stories of the Opioid Crisis
Join the Hopkins team behind the Opioid Industry Documents Archive (OIDA) at a 3-day online symposium exploring OIDA’s value in addressing fundamental questions of importance to health policy experts, archivists and historians.
The Opioid Industry Documents Archive (OIDA) is a digital archive co-created by the University of California, San Francisco and Johns Hopkins University containing millions of documents from the opioid industry that shed light on the root causes of the opioid crisis. This unique virtual symposium offers a series of complementary panels that demonstrates OIDA’s value in addressing fundamental questions of importance to historians, health policy and legal experts, journalists, archivists and people with lived experience.
DAY 3: Histories and Stories of the Opioid Crisis
- David Herzberg, University atBuffalo (SUNY)
- Domenic Esposito, Opioid Spoon Project
- Alexis Pleus, Truth Pharm
This interdisciplinary panel will explore the ways in which OIDA collections serve as an important resource for looking back and looking forward, telling new stories and developing new analyses about the worst drug epidemic in U.S. history.
OIDA was launched by UCSF and Johns Hopkins in March 2021 as a free public resource. The digital repository includes publicly disclosed documents arising from litigation brought against opioid manufacturers, distributors, pharmacies and consultants by local and state governments and tribal communities. Read more
The Hopkins team includes faculty and staff from the schools of Public Health, Medicine, Nursing, and Engineering, the Welch Medical Library, and the Sheridan Libraries' Digital Research and Curation Center.