The Denver Post

Progress made in fight vs. opioid addiction

- By Carla K. Johnson

Figures from a U.S. government survey released Friday show some progress in the fight against the ongoing opioid addiction crisis, with fewer people in 2017 using heroin for the first time compared with the previous year.

The number of new users of heroin decreased from 170,000 in 2016 to 81,000 in 2017, a oneyear drop that would need to be sustained for years to reduce the number of fatal overdoses, ex perts said.

Fewer Americans are misusing or addicted to prescripti­on opioid painkiller­s. And more people are getting treatment for heroin and opioid addiction, the survey found.

The Trump administra­tion said the positive trends show that government efforts are working.

Messages are reaching people about the dangers of heroin and the deadly contaminan­ts it often contains on the street, Dr. Elinore McCanceKat­z, an administra­tion health official, said in a video presentati­on released with the figures.

Among the other findings:

• Marijuana use climbed in all age groups except young teenagers, with 2.5 percent of those 26 and older, or 5.3 million adults, reporting they use marijuana daily or almost daily .

• Methamphet­amine and cocaine use climbed in young adults, ages 18 to 25. The uptick may indicate that users are shifting from opioids to other drugs, said Leo Beletsky, a public health policy expert at Northeaste­rn University in Boston.

• Young adults have increasing rates of serious mental illness, major depression and suicidal thoughts.

• The number of new heroin users in 2017 — 81,000 — was lower than the numbers in most years from 2009 to 2016. But it was similar to the numbers of new heroin users in 2002 through 2008.

Experts said there’s still work to be done before success can be declared.

“Taken together, this does not look like the portrait of a nation with improving mental health and addiction issues,” said Brendan Saloner, an addiction researcher at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. “It’s hard to look at this and not think we need to be doing a better job than we’re doing now.”

Earlier this month, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released preliminar­y figures that appear to show a leveling off in overdose deaths in late 2017 and in the first two months of this year.

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