The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Deaths from drugs, suicide reach a record

- Adeel Hassan

An analysis of CDC data by two nonprofits reveals deaths from alcohol, drugs and suicide in the U.S. hit the highest level in 2017.

The number of deaths from alcohol, drugs and suicide in 2017 hit the highest level since the collection of federal mortality data started in 1999, according to an analysis by two public health nonprofits, the Trust for America’s Health and the Well Being Trust. To reach their conclusion, the two groups parsed the latest available data from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Two crises

Alcohol, drugs and suicide killed more than twice as many as they did in 1999.

More than 150,000 Americans died from alcohol and drug-induced fatalities and suicide in 2017. Nearly a third — 47,173 — were suicides.

“There are two crises unfolding in America right now,” said Dr. Benjamin Miller, chief policy officer for Well Being Trust and founding director of the Eugene S. Farley Jr. Health Policy Center in Aurora, Colorado. “One is in health care, and one is in society.”

Miller attributed the increasing disparitie­s in health care and inequaliti­es in income as crucial factors in the feelings of despair, loneliness and a lack of belonging that contribute­d to suicides among many Americans.

Synthetic opioids fuel deaths

Twenty years ago, less than 1,000 deaths a year were attributed to fentanyl and synthetic opioids. In 2017, more than 1,000 Americans died from synthetic opioid overdoses every two weeks, topping 28,000 for the year.

Most of the increase was concentrat­ed in the preceding five years, when such deaths rose tenfold and the opioid epidemic became the leading cause of death for Americans under 55.

West Virginia and New Mex- ico had the highest number of deaths, the analysis showed, with Mississipp­i and Texas the lowest. By region, the Northeast had the highest opioid death rates followed by the Midwest. The South’s rate was nearly half that of the Northeast.

“The numbers are driven in no small way by pharmaceut­ical companies creating addicting drugs and clinicians inappropri­ately oversubscr­ibing opioids,” said John Auerbach, president and chief executive of Trust for America’s Health.

Though doctors and drug companies have been taking steps to control opioid addictions, Auerbach said, patients who are addicted to prescripti­on opioids often shift to synthetic ones, like fentanyl, which is 50 times more potent than heroin. Fentanyl has also snaked its way into other drugs like cocaine, Xanax and MDMA, widening the epidemic.

Suicides by gun

Guns, which remain plentiful and accessible, were used in nearly half of the nation’s 47,173 suicides in 2017, the analysis showed.

Though most common with Caucasians, suicide by gun increased proportion­ally more among racial and ethnic minority groups, the study showed, especially among African-Americans and Latinos.

The rate among children and adolescent­s increased 16 percent.

Suicides can be the result of trauma that goes unrecogniz­ed or unaddresse­d — the loss of a job, home or death of a loved one, Auerbach said.

“Without the social cohesivene­ss and social support built within family,” he said, “people are experienci­ng trauma without what gave them resilience historical­ly.”

While state legislatur­es passed 69 gun control measures in 2018, the measures are not reflected in this data, which were collected before 2018.

Suicide by suffocatio­n

There were 13,075 such deaths in 2017. Miller and Auerbach attributed this increase to copycat suicides.

“People get the idea from high-profile celebritie­s who die by hanging,” Miller said. In addition, the materials used in a hanging suicide are much more available than firearms.

Five states reported decrease

Massachuse­tts, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, Utah and Wyoming saw decreases. In some instances, the numbers in these state were high to begin with, according to Auerbach, a former Massachuse­tts health commission­er.

He said in response to the crisis, Massachuse­tts had begun to limit prescripti­ons of opioids; increase patient beds; focus on quality of care for patients who had suffered trauma; create suicide prevention programs for veterans; and reduce the stigma of suicide through public informatio­n campaigns.

“The old way was, ‘Don’t talk about it,’” he said. “The new way is, ‘Let’s talk about it.’”

 ?? SCOTT MCINTYRE / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? According to an analysis by two nonprofits, the number of deaths from alcohol, drugs and suicide in 2017 hit the highest level since the collection of federal mortality data started in 1999.
SCOTT MCINTYRE / THE NEW YORK TIMES According to an analysis by two nonprofits, the number of deaths from alcohol, drugs and suicide in 2017 hit the highest level since the collection of federal mortality data started in 1999.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States