Vancouver Sun

OPIOID EPIDEMIC DEADLIER THAN VIETNAM WAR, STUDY SAYS

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Slightly less than one per cent of all Americans who died in 1968 lost their lives while serving in the Vietnam War.

Yet even the toll of that conflict’s bloodiest year was less significan­t than that being caused by the opioid epidemic.

According to new research, a staggering 1.5 per cent of all American deaths in 2016 were attributab­le to opioids.

Young adults are being particular­ly hard hit by opioids, which now account for one of every five deaths of Americans aged 25 to 34.

Dr. Tara Gomes of St. Michael’s Hospital in Toronto, who led the research, em- phasized the “immense contributi­on of opioid deaths to overall mortality among young adults, and the burden that this will have on society today, and into the future.”

Because of its disproport­ionate impact on the young, the opioid epidemic robs Americans of more years of life than do prevalent late-life conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease and prostate cancer. According to Gomes’s and colleagues’ research, the opioid epidemic resulted in almost 1.7 million years of lost life across the U.S. population in 2016.

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