Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Overdose death rate ticks up in US cities

Urban areas inch past rural spots, CDC report finds

- By Mike Stobbe

NEW YORK — U.S. drug overdose deaths, which have been concentrat­ed in Appalachia and other rural areas for more than a dozen years, are back to being most common in big cities again, according to a government report.

The report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the urban overdose death rate surpassed the rural rate in 2016 and 2017. Rates for last year and this year are not yet available. But experts, citing available data, say the urban rate is likely to stay higher in the near future.

The difference between the urban and rural counties was not large. In 2017, there were 22 overdose deaths per 100,000 people living in urban areas, compared with 20 per 100,000 in rural areas.

The nation is battling the deadliest drug overdose epidemic in U.S. history. About 68,000 Americans died of overdoses last year, according to preliminar­y CDC statistics reported last month.

Experts believe the epidemic has been playing out differentl­y in different parts of the country, and they say it is best understood by comparing geographic regions — Appalachia and the Northeast, for example.

The new CDC report, which was released Friday, looked at urban and rural overdose death rates for the nation overall. The researcher­s found both rates have been rising, but the urban rate shot up more dramatical­ly after 2015 to surpass the rural rate.

Baltimore, Chicago and New York all reported dramatic spikes in overdose deaths in the last few years, and they are not alone.

Diego Cuadros, a University of Cincinnati researcher, said the CDC findings are consistent with what he and his colleagues have seen in Ohio.

“Most of the hot spots are in the urban areas,” he said.

The CDC found the urban rates are driven by deaths in men and deaths from heroin, fentanyl and cocaine.

That probably is due to a shift in the current overdose epidemic, said Dr. Daniel Ciccarone, a drug policy expert at the University of California, San Francisco.

The epidemic was initially driven by opioid pain pills, which were often as widely available in the country as in the city. But then many drug users shifted to heroin and then to fentanyl, and the illegal drug distributi­on system for heroin and fentanyl is more developed in cities, Ciccarone said.

Another possible explanatio­n is increasing overdose deaths among blacks and Hispanics, including those concentrat­ed in urban areas, he added.

Women still die of overdoses at higher rates in rural areas, the CDC report found. And death rates tied to methamphet­amine and prescripti­on opioid painkiller­s remain higher in rural areas too.

Using death certificat­e data, the CDC researcher­s looked at whether overdose victims were living in rural or urban counties at the time they died. They defined urban areas as counties with large and small cities and their suburbs.

Rural areas were counties fewer than 50,000

The report looked at trends from 1999 through 2017. Overdose death rates for 2018 are to be reported later this year.

The urban and rural death rates were nearly identical for people ages 25 to 44 — the age group with the worst fatal overdose problem. “Drug epidemics tend to affect young people,” Ciccarone said.

But the urban rate was significan­tly higher in other age groups, particular­ly in those ages 45 to 64. nonsuburba­n with residents.

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