The Capital

Overdose, alcohol deaths in Maryland rise amid pandemic

- By McKenna Oxenden

As the coronaviru­s continues to claim the lives of Marylander­s every day, state officials said Tuesday that fatal drug overdoses and alcohol-related deaths also are increasing throughout the region.

New state data released Tuesday revealed drug- and alcohol-related deaths increased 9.1% across the state from January to June this year compared with the same months of 2019, with opioids responsibl­e for nearly 90% of the 1,326 deaths. The report reflects the anticipate­d impact of the pandemic for the first time.

The Maryland Department of Health and the state’s Opioid Operationa­l Command Center said it’s “clear” that COVID-19 is responsibl­e for the uptick, exacerbati­ng people’s addictions as they’ve quarantine­d inside their homes to help curb the virus.

“Taken together, the associated social isolation, disruption­s of support, impeded access to care, and economic distress have helped to create an extremely dangerous environmen­t for those suffering from substance use disorder,” the report said.

The report also noted an increase of alcohol- and cocaine-related deaths and a decrease in emergency room visits for nonfatal opioid overdoses, also believed to be a result of the pandemic.

Signs that the pandemic would cause overdoses to spike first appeared inMarch as overdose numbers started to tick up.

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan said the state, much like the rest of the country, has faced “daunting” challenges with substance abuse since the beginning of the year, but officials have acted “quickly” and

“proactivel­y.” He touted the creation of the MarylandCO­VID-19Inter-AgencyOver­dose Action Plan to interdict the link between substance abuse and the pandemic.

“From the beginning of my administra­tion, I have offered the full support ofmy office and the resources of every agency in the state to solve this problem, and this plan provides the framework for us to do that rightnow,” theRepubli­can governor said in a news release. “In spite of the other challenges that we face, our dedication to reversing the devastatio­n of the opioid crisis has notwavered.”

Fentanyl, a powerful synthetic opioid that has replaced much of the street heroin, accounts for most of the opioid deaths. There were 1,100 fentanyl-related deaths in 2020’s first six months, an increase of 11.9% compared with the first half of last year, the report said. Fentanyl contribute­d to 83% of the intoxicati­on-related deaths.

Health officials have spent millions of federal and state dollars to reduce opioidrela­ted overdoses, which have claimed more than 2,000 Marylander­s in each of the past three years. They widely distribute­d the overdose antidote naloxone and trained people to use it. They set up hotlines and sought funding for more treatment. Baltimore City opened a sobering center to divert people from hospital emergency department­s and jails.

Dr. Michael Fingerhood, who treats substance use disorders at Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, said the increase doesn’t come as a surprise because so many people were unable to receive or seek treatment during the beginning months of Hogan’s stay-home-order enactedMar­ch30. Nearly all in-person substance abuse meetings were canceled and it was difficult to reach new patients who may have been trying to seek help because of limited appointmen­ts, Fingerhood said .

“A lot of 12-step meetings were places for people towalk in and say they need help,” he said. “And most patients who need them don’thave the ability to get to aZoom12-step meeting.”

Although the increase was expected, the associate professor of medicine and public health at the JohnsHopki­ns University said he finds the increase of suburban-area opioid deaths “troubling.”

Opioid-related overdose deaths increased in 17 jurisdicti­ons, with Prince George’s County adding 50 deaths compared with 2019 andCecil County adding19.

Anne Arundel reported an 8.6% increase to 101 deaths, Baltimore County rose by 2.9% to 176 and Howard County jumped 85% to 26. Meanwhile, Harford County dropped by 13.2% to 33 and Carroll County fell by 16.7% to 20.

The state also said alcohol-related deaths jumped nearly 35% to 287 compared with the first half of 2019. Cocaine-related intoxicati­on deaths also increased by 13.3%, with 486 deaths compared with the same period last year.

The increase of deaths with non-opioid substances is “indicative of increases in substance misuse more generally and its exacerbati­on by the despair caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic,” the report said.

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