Drug Overdose Deaths on the Rise
Drug Overdose Deaths on the Rise
Sept. 22, 2008 (Anaheim, Calif.) -- Deaths from accidental drug overdoses have increased dramatically in recent years, and prescription painkillers account for much of the problem, according to research presented today at the National Safety Council meeting.
As deaths from workplace injuries and motor vehicle crashes have declined by about 19% in the last 15 years, death rates in the community and at home have risen 44%, Janet Froetscher, the president and CEO of the council, told participants attending the opening session.
When council researchers started to "unravel" the statistics, Froetscher tells WebMD, two areas for the increased home and community death rates jumped out: falls by the elderly and poisoning deaths.
Poisoning is a category that includes deaths from accidental drug overdoses from prescription drugs, illicit drugs, other solids and liquid substances, and gases and vapors, according to the council.
"The perception is that it's kids getting into the medicine cabinet," she says. Not so.
In 2006, about 24,000 people died in the U.S. from accidental drug overdoses, she says. That's a 100% increase from 2000.
The biggest rise in these accidental poisonings is among men and women of working age, 20 to 64, and is mainly due to abusing prescription pain medicines such as oxycodone, methadone, hydrocodone, fentanyl, and buprenorphine.
The most rapid growth in accidental poisoning deaths during the past decade occurred in those 45 to 64 years old, Froetscher says, followed by those 25-44 and then 15-24.
Prescription opioids account for more than 38% of the deaths, Froetscher says, citing data from the CDC. Cocaine accounts for about 25%, heroin and other illicit drugs 14%, other drugs and unknown, 22.5%.
Among those who used the painkillers for non-medical purposes, 60% got them from a friend or relative, Froetscher says.
In the keynote address, William Bennett, former U.S. Secretary of Education and the first "drug czar" under the first President Bush, called for greater awareness of the growing drug abuse problem, including the problem with painkillers.
"Not too many years ago, we got drug use down," he told participants.
As deaths from workplace injuries and motor vehicle crashes have declined by about 19% in the last 15 years, death rates in the community and at home have risen 44%, Janet Froetscher, the president and CEO of the council, told participants attending the opening session.
When council researchers started to "unravel" the statistics, Froetscher tells WebMD, two areas for the increased home and community death rates jumped out: falls by the elderly and poisoning deaths.
Poisoning is a category that includes deaths from accidental drug overdoses from prescription drugs, illicit drugs, other solids and liquid substances, and gases and vapors, according to the council.
"The perception is that it's kids getting into the medicine cabinet," she says. Not so.
In 2006, about 24,000 people died in the U.S. from accidental drug overdoses, she says. That's a 100% increase from 2000.
The biggest rise in these accidental poisonings is among men and women of working age, 20 to 64, and is mainly due to abusing prescription pain medicines such as oxycodone, methadone, hydrocodone, fentanyl, and buprenorphine.
Drug Overdose Problem
The most rapid growth in accidental poisoning deaths during the past decade occurred in those 45 to 64 years old, Froetscher says, followed by those 25-44 and then 15-24.
Prescription opioids account for more than 38% of the deaths, Froetscher says, citing data from the CDC. Cocaine accounts for about 25%, heroin and other illicit drugs 14%, other drugs and unknown, 22.5%.
Among those who used the painkillers for non-medical purposes, 60% got them from a friend or relative, Froetscher says.
Drug Overdose Solutions
In the keynote address, William Bennett, former U.S. Secretary of Education and the first "drug czar" under the first President Bush, called for greater awareness of the growing drug abuse problem, including the problem with painkillers.
"Not too many years ago, we got drug use down," he told participants.
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