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After Prince death, Chaka Khan seeks help for painkiller addiction

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Funk legend Chaka Khan has revealed that she is seeking treatment for addiction to painkillers, which cost the life of her friend and musical partner Prince.

"Chaka has struggled with a dependence on prescription pain medications and has voluntarily entered the program to get healthy and stay that way," she said in a statement late Sunday.

The 63-year-old singer famous for her cover of Prince's "I Feel for You" said she was postponing performances until August, although she would resume recording this month.

Her sister Yvonne Stevens, a fellow artist who goes by the stage name Taka Boom, said that she went into rehab with Khan and that the pair had already completed the main 28 days of the program.

"Due to all our comrades who have lost their battle with prescription drugs," Stevens wrote on Facebook, "we've decided this shall not be our fate."

Prince, one of his generation's most influential artists and ostensibly a model of health, died on April 21 at his Paisley Park estate outside Minneapolis.

An autopsy found that he overdosed on fentanyl, a powerful painkiller used to treat severe pain, making Prince the most high-profile victim of an epidemic of opioid use in the United States that claimed more than 26,000 lives in 2014.

Prince had undergone hip surgery but maintained rigorous live performances. A representative from a California clinic that treats painkiller addiction had come to see him on the very day he died.

Khan, born and raised in Chicago, made her name as the front woman of the funk band Rufus in the 1970s.

She enjoyed a career revival in the 1980s with support from funk-loving Prince, winning a wide audience with "I Feel for You" and also collaborating with Ray Charles and Quincy Jones on the hit cover "I'll Be Good to You."

Khan struggled with drug and alcohol abuse in the past but has appeared to be healthier in recent years, losing weight and, like Prince, promoting a vegetarian diet.

Funk legend Chaka Khan has revealed that she is seeking treatment for addiction to painkillers, which cost the life of her friend and musical partner Prince.

“Chaka has struggled with a dependence on prescription pain medications and has voluntarily entered the program to get healthy and stay that way,” she said in a statement late Sunday.

The 63-year-old singer famous for her cover of Prince’s “I Feel for You” said she was postponing performances until August, although she would resume recording this month.

Her sister Yvonne Stevens, a fellow artist who goes by the stage name Taka Boom, said that she went into rehab with Khan and that the pair had already completed the main 28 days of the program.

“Due to all our comrades who have lost their battle with prescription drugs,” Stevens wrote on Facebook, “we’ve decided this shall not be our fate.”

Prince, one of his generation’s most influential artists and ostensibly a model of health, died on April 21 at his Paisley Park estate outside Minneapolis.

An autopsy found that he overdosed on fentanyl, a powerful painkiller used to treat severe pain, making Prince the most high-profile victim of an epidemic of opioid use in the United States that claimed more than 26,000 lives in 2014.

Prince had undergone hip surgery but maintained rigorous live performances. A representative from a California clinic that treats painkiller addiction had come to see him on the very day he died.

Khan, born and raised in Chicago, made her name as the front woman of the funk band Rufus in the 1970s.

She enjoyed a career revival in the 1980s with support from funk-loving Prince, winning a wide audience with “I Feel for You” and also collaborating with Ray Charles and Quincy Jones on the hit cover “I’ll Be Good to You.”

Khan struggled with drug and alcohol abuse in the past but has appeared to be healthier in recent years, losing weight and, like Prince, promoting a vegetarian diet.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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