Home Emergency Medicine Slight Decline Seen in U.S. Drug Overdose Deaths

Slight Decline Seen in U.S. Drug Overdose Deaths

Declines not spread equally everywhere — some states experienced another year of increases of fatal ODs

By Physician’s Briefing Staff HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, May 16, 2024 (HealthDay News) — New 2023 provisional data from the National Center for Health Statistics show the first decline in deaths from drug overdose in the United States since 2018.

“Statistics indicate there were an estimated 107,543 drug overdose deaths in the United States during 2023 — a decrease of 3 percent from the 111,029 deaths estimated in 2022,” statisticians from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention wrote. They released the new numbers May 15 as a data presentation from the agency’s National Vital Statistics System.

An epidemic of addiction to prescription opioids like Oxycontin, along with the introduction of lethal additives to street drugs such as fentanyl or xylazine, has spurred a steady rise in drug-related deaths. But the new 2023 numbers, though still incomplete, could give Americans a glimmer of hope.

Overall, fatal drug overdoses fell slightly in 2023. That included overdoses linked to opioids, which declined from 84,181 in 2022 to 81,083 in 2023, the CDC said. However, the good news was not spread equally. Some states (Nebraska, Kansas, Indiana, and Maine ) saw declines in fatal ODs of 15 percent or more in 2023, while others (Alaska, Washington, and Oregon) charted big increases.

And while fewer people died in overdoses involving synthetic opioids (primarily fentanyl), the rate of fatal overdoses involving cocaine and psychostimulants (such as methamphetamine) actually rose in 2023, the CDC said.

However, overall, “this is the first annual decrease in drug overdose deaths since 2018,” the CDC noted. Still, the agency stressed that the 2023 data is “incomplete and subject to change as more 2023 data are submitted to the National Vital Statistics System.”

Statement from CDC Chief Medical Officer Deb Houry, M.D.

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