Los Angeles Times

Fentanyl’s brutal toll on homeless people in O.C.

Deaths surged over a decade, and accidental overdoses are a big reason why, a report says

- By Salvador Hernandez

More homeless people in Orange County are dying each year, and accidental drug overdoses involving fentanyl are a leading reason why, according to a new county report.

Within a 10-year span, the report found, the number of deaths of people experienci­ng homelessne­ss more than quadrupled, with 395 deaths recorded in the county in 2021.

By 2021, the report found, 36% of the deaths of homeless people in the county were directly linked to fentanyl. An additional 8% were linked to overdoses involving other drugs.

“The rise in the number of deaths of people experienci­ng homelessne­ss is concerning,” Orange County Sheriff Don Barnes said in a statement. “Most troubling is the significan­t increase we are seeing in fentanyl-related deaths.”

The findings were issued in a report by Orange County’s Homeless Death Review Committee, commission­ed by Barnes in 2022. The committee is made up of experts, including law enforcemen­t, health and nonprofit officials, to explore the causes of deaths among the county’s homeless.

The report issued by the committee mirrors what communitie­s across the U.S. are experienci­ng with fentanyl’s increasing and ominous appearance in street drugs. In 2012, the Centers for Disease Control

and Prevention recorded 1,615 overdose deaths in the U.S. linked to fentanyl. By 2021, the number of deaths due to synthetic opioids, primarily fentanyl, was more than 71,000.

Orange County’s Homeless Death Review Committee’s first report, released Monday, shows the county’s homeless population has been significan­tly affected by the drug’s expanding availabili­ty.

The report found that the number of deaths each year has been steadily rising since at least 2010, but with a significan­t increase in 2020, the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. In that year, 338 homeless people died, a 55% increase from the previous year.

According to the report, the number of accidental deaths that year also surpassed the number of natural deaths.

In 2020, 235 of the 338 recorded deaths were considered accidental. Seventy-six percent of those accidental deaths were drug-related, the report found.

The second-leading cause of accidental deaths among the homeless was being hit by a vehicle.

The report also found homicide and suicide rates among the homeless were higher than the national rate.

The number of hospitaliz­ations also ballooned over the 10-year span. Hospitaliz­ations of homeless people in the county numbered 727 in 2011, and by 2021 the figure was 5,649. Mental illness was the main cause, according to the report.

The commission recommende­d that the sheriff push for legislatio­n that would expand the data that are legally available for the commission to examine specific deaths. It’s also recommendi­ng that county agencies expand opportunit­ies for substance abuse treatment and expand the availabili­ty of Narcan, the drug that is used to reverse fentanyl overdoses.

The commission is also asking to look at sentencing laws that would require drug treatment programs as part of crime sentences.

A study by the L.A. County Department of Public Health last year found deaths of homeless people in that county soared by 56% in the year after the start of the pandemic, driven primarily by an increase in overdoses.

In the year surveyed, 179 homeless people died of COVID-19, accounting for about a quarter of the increase in overall deaths from the year prior. A surge in fatal overdoses was likewise the primary driver of the increase. In the pre-pandemic year, the Department of Public Health reported just over 400 overdose deaths. In the year after the outbreak, that figure nearly doubled, to 715.

The numbers in L.A. County mirror figures recorded in San Francisco.

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? A MAN HOLDS a naloxone kit, used to reverse opioid overdoses. Fentanyl is linked to over a third of the deaths of unhoused people in Orange County.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times A MAN HOLDS a naloxone kit, used to reverse opioid overdoses. Fentanyl is linked to over a third of the deaths of unhoused people in Orange County.

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