USA TODAY International Edition

Opioids killing more kids, researcher­s say

- Jayne O’Donnell and Terry DeMio

Almost 9,000 children and teenagers died from opioid poisoning from 1999 to 2016, and annual deaths increased threefold over the 18 years, a team of researcher­s at Yale University reported Friday.

The finding suggests the opioid epidemic will likely continue, the team said, unless legislator­s, public health officials, doctors and parents do more to keep the drugs out of the hands of young people.

More than 80 percent of the deaths to children and teens were unintentio­nal, the researcher­s reported in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n. Five percent were from suicide and about 2 percent from homicide.

Nearly a quarter of the children under 5, and 35 percent of those younger than 1, were the victims of homicide.

Heroin was the cause of death for 24 percent of deaths to teens 15 to 19 years old. Between 2014 and 2016, synthetic opioids led to the deaths of nearly a third of all prescripti­on and illegal opioid deaths among older teens.

The Yale researcher­s found that methadone was associated with 36 percent of the children’s deaths. In many cases, parents or other adults in the children’s lives used methadone to manage pain or treat addiction.

The risk of children misusing other people’s methadone is “particular­ly relevant,” the researcher­s wrote, as more people with opiod use disorder are getting medication as part of their treatment. That means more children will be exposed to methadone and buprenorph­ine in the future unless “further safeguards” are implemente­d.

The mortality rate for methadone peaked in 2007, however, and has been declining since. The Food and Drug Administra­tion issued a public health advisory in 2006 warning doctors about the use of methadone for pain.

Dr. Marc Fishman is an addiction psychiatri­st and professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine who treats teens and young adults with opioid use disorder.

He says the results are alarming because deaths to children and teens are increasing the same way as they are for adults – they start with pills, turn to heroin and die from the synthetic opiod painkiller fentanyl.

Young people also seek treatment far less often that adults, Fishman says, which makes it harder to track youth opioid use.

The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that doctors prescribe teens medication-assisted treatment for opioid addiction.

“Even though we’re treating patients better with medication, it’s a wake-up call to be as careful with these medication­s than any others,” Fishman says.

Jada Walker, a Kentucky woman who used methadone to treat an addiction to opioids, told the USA TODAY Network in 2016 that she kept her methadone in a lock box so it was safe from her young children. Fishman says that’s exactly what patients using medication-assisted treatment need to do.

There are some encouragin­g signs in the numbers. The National Institute for Drug Abuse reported this month that teenage opioid misuse has fallen to a record low in the 43-year history of its Monitoring the Future survey.

The use of prescripti­on opiods and other narcotics other than heroin in the previous year is at 3.4 percent among 12th graders, a significant drop.

 ?? AP ?? Adult dug abusers’ carelessne­ss is killing more children in the USA, Yale researcher­s find.
AP Adult dug abusers’ carelessne­ss is killing more children in the USA, Yale researcher­s find.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States