Marysville Appeal-Democrat

CDC records highest-ever drug deaths in one year

- The Philadelph­ia Inquirer (TNS)

Between May 2019 and May 2020, 81,230 Americans died of drug overdoses – the highest number of drug deaths ever recorded in a 12-month span, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported.

After a drop in 2018, overdoses began increasing again in 2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic, the CDC said in an advisory published last month. But early data shows that spike has accelerate­d during the pandemic, with the largest overdose increases taking place between March and May – when the first lockdowns began.

The jump in overdoses is largely driven by synthetic opioids like fentanyl, which is significan­tly more powerful than heroin, the CDC said. The agency urged local and state health department­s to expand the use of naloxone, the overdosere­versing drug; make treatment more readily available; and track overdose outbreaks more effectivel­y.

Advocates have raised concerns this year about the need to keep people in addiction safe from both the coronaviru­s

– to which people with opioid addiction are particular­ly vulnerable – and overdoses.

In a Philadelph­ia Inquirer article last year about the rising overdose toll around the country, Northeaste­rn University professor Leo Beletsky said lockdown measures must be designed with people who use drugs in mind, making sure they can access overdose-reversal drugs, treatment and economic and social support so they can safely stay home. He added that many response measures are “lacking” in that respect.

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