News

Overdose Deaths Dropped For The First Time In 28 Years

By Daniel M

January 31, 2020

The number of drug deaths dropped sharply in 2018 after 28 years of rising casualties, and Americans’ life expectancy also reversed its decline, rising by one month to 78.7 years, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The drop in drug deaths saved roughly 2,900 lives, and it follows a massive death spike under President Barack Obama, whose progressive deputies did little to discover or curb the massive spike in deaths from opioids and fentanyl shipped from Mexico and China. “The age-adjusted rate of drug overdose deaths increased … by 2% per year from 2006 through 2013, and by 14% per year from 2013 through 2016,” the CDC reported.

A March 2019 report by the Washington Post said:

In May 2016, a group of national health experts issued an urgent plea in a private letter to high-level officials in the Obama administration. Thousands of people were dying from overdoses of fentanyl — the deadliest drug to ever hit U.S. streets — and the administration needed to take immediate action. The epidemic had been escalating for three years. “The fentanyl crisis represents an extraordinary public health challenge — and requires an extraordinary public health response,” the experts wrote to six administration officials, including the nation’s “drug czar” and the chief of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Hormel Foods Announces Recall – Toss Anything with These Two Codes Immediately Revenge or Repentance: What Are You Wishing on Your Worst Enemy? Biden administration puts hold on US ammunition shipment to Israel: report US shared intel with UK showing ‘high likelihood’ of COVID-19 lab leak: report Eye-popping haul amid trials has Team Trump closing fundraising gap with Biden Legendary Comedian Bravely Attacks Sharia Law – Highlights How Some Cultures Are Superior Car Drives Straight into White House Perimeter Gate, Resulting in Deadly Crash Chicago teachers’ $50B demands include pay hikes, abortions, migrant accommodation Utah hunter finds skeletal remains of man missing since 2019 in remote mountains Republicans believe college campus chaos works in their favor War veteran in crucial battleground race expands campaign, sets sights firmly on vulnerable Democrat White House looks to convince Americans of ‘Bidenomics’ with Kamala Harris tour Laws protecting children from online porn are winning in some states as activists push nationwide solution Crash outside White House security barrier leaves 1 dead: Police Class Warfare: IRS Promises to Increase Audits of ‘Wealthy’ Taxpayers by at Least 50% – Report The administration considered the request but did not act on it.

Under President Donald Trump, the death toll has dropped by 4.5 percent — or roughly 2,900 lives per year — amid a growing economy that is pulling sidelined Americans back into jobs. That gain is aided by Trump’s rejection of business demands for more migrants, and his increased actions against drug smuggling from Mexico and China. The partial recovery is showcased by a January 30 report in the New York Times:

“It’s literally like coming out of a fog,” said Andrew Wright, 34, who has been drug-free since August 2018, when he entered treatment at the Counseling Center in Portsmouth, Ohio. Medicaid, the government insurance program, covered his care. “It’s like I’m 22 and I’ve finally made it out of my parents’ house, embracing life for the first time. I’m learning how to live.” … … he has now stayed off drugs for the longest period in his adult life, he said, a fact he attributes to his treatment program together with a change in the attitudes of the people in his town. A small grooming products company, Doc Spartan, hired him to make beard oil and grenade-shaped soap. Someone sold him a cheap car. Others helped him start sorting out his life — getting driver’s license, dealing with his unpaid bills and getting treatment for hepatitis C. “I literally feel like I’m a soldier in this war, and I really like it,” said Mr. Wright, who now works as a trainer at PSKC, a CrossFit gym, and at a halfway house. Hormel Foods Announces Recall – Toss Anything with These Two Codes Immediately Revenge or Repentance: What Are You Wishing on Your Worst Enemy? Biden administration puts hold on US ammunition shipment to Israel: report US shared intel with UK showing ‘high likelihood’ of COVID-19 lab leak: report Eye-popping haul amid trials has Team Trump closing fundraising gap with Biden Legendary Comedian Bravely Attacks Sharia Law – Highlights How Some Cultures Are Superior Car Drives Straight into White House Perimeter Gate, Resulting in Deadly Crash Chicago teachers’ $50B demands include pay hikes, abortions, migrant accommodation Utah hunter finds skeletal remains of man missing since 2019 in remote mountains Republicans believe college campus chaos works in their favor War veteran in crucial battleground race expands campaign, sets sights firmly on vulnerable Democrat White House looks to convince Americans of ‘Bidenomics’ with Kamala Harris tour Laws protecting children from online porn are winning in some states as activists push nationwide solution Crash outside White House security barrier leaves 1 dead: Police Class Warfare: IRS Promises to Increase Audits of ‘Wealthy’ Taxpayers by at Least 50% – Report

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported January 29:

In 2018, the age-adjusted rate of drug overdose deaths in the United States was 4.6% lower than the rate in 2017. In 2018, there were 67,367 drug overdose deaths in the United States (Figure 1), 4.1% fewer deaths than in 2017 (70,237).

The death toll fell in several midwest states which had been hit hard by outsourcing and free trade:

The drug overdose death rate was lower in 2018 than in 2017 for 15 jurisdictions: Alaska, the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Maine, Minnesota, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Wisconsin (Figure 2). The drug overdose death rate was higher in 2018 than in 2017 for 5 states: California, Delaware, Missouri, New Jersey, and South Carolina.

But the good news is mixed with bad news:

In 2018, the states with the highest age-adjusted drug overdose death rates were West Virginia (51.5 per 100,000 standard population), Delaware (43.8), Maryland (37.2), Pennsylvania (36.1), Ohio (35.9), and New Hampshire (35.8).

The death rate from “synthetic opioids” — such as fentanyl — grew slower than in prior years, while the deaths from heroin and opioids fell:

Better cancer treatments also saved many lives and to extend lifespans to 78.7 years, according to the CDC. The New York Times reported:

Improvements in cancer mortality rates represented the single largest share of the life expectancy gain in 2018, about 30 percent. Next came the decline in so-called unintentional injuries, which include deaths from car accidents and drug overdoses. That category accounted for about 25 percent of the gain, a change that was driven almost entirely by a decline in drug deaths …

But life expenctancy remains below the 2014 peak, according to a January 30 report in the Washington Post:

A decline in the death rate from cancer is the single largest driver of the small increase in life expectancy, the CDC reported. Five of the other nine leading causes of death also showed declines in death rates, including the top cause, heart disease, as well as unintentional injuries (which include overdoses), chronic lower respiratory diseases, stroke and Alzheimer’s disease. Two more, diabetes and kidney disease, were essentially unchanged. Deaths from suicide and influenza and pneumonia increased.