- E. Coli Fears Spur Recall of 167,000 Pounds of Ground Beef
- Weight-Loss Drug Zepbound May Lower Heart Failure Deaths
- Nearly 160 Million Americans Harmed by Another’s Drinking, Drug Use
- 1 in 4 Americans Now Struggling to Cover Medical Costs
- Getting Fitter Can Really Help Keep Dementia at Bay
- Skin Patch Could Monitor Your Blood Pressure
- There May Be a Better Way to Treat Hematoma Brain Bleeds
- Chronic Joint Pain Plus Depression Can Take Toll on the Brain
- Living in Space Won’t Permanently Harm Astronauts’ Thinking Skills
- Kids’ Injuries in Sports and at Home: When Is It Right to Seek Medical Attention?
Nearly 4 in 10 Americans Know Someone Who’s Died From Drug Overdose
More than two in every five Americans know someone who’s died from a drug overdose, a new study shows.
The study highlights the heavy toll that the U.S. opioid epidemic has taken on the nation, researchers say.
“The experiences and needs of millions of survivors of an overdose loss largely have been overlooked in the clinical and public health response to the nation’s overdose crisis,” said lead researcher Alison Athey, a behavioral scientist at RAND Corp., a nonprofit research organization.
“Our findings emphasize the need for research into the prevalence and impact of overdose loss, particularly among groups and communities that experience disproportionate rates of loss,” Athey added in a RAND news release.
More than 109,000 people died from a drug overdose in 2022, placing the national total since 2000 at more than 1.1 million overdose deaths, researchers said in background notes.
But little research has explored the experiences of those left behind by fatal drug OD’s, researchers said.
For the study, RAND researchers turned to just over 2,000 adults participating in the RAND American Life Panel, a nationally representative group of people regularly surveyed online.
More than 42% of the participants reported personally knowing at least one person who’s died from an overdose, results show.
That suggests 125 million Americans have experienced such a loss, researchers said.
Further, about one-third of those who’d lost someone to overdose said their lives were disrupted by the death, results show.
People were more likely to have known an OD victim if they lived in New England (Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont) and in the East South Central region (Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi, Tennessee) than in other parts of the nation, researchers found.
Women, married people, U.S. natives and urban dwellers all were more likely to know a person who’d died from an OD, results show.
The new study was published Feb. 21 in the American Journal of Public Health.
Researchers compared the aftereffects of a drug OD death to the psychological distress caused by having someone in your life die by suicide.
“It is likely that a similar continuum of survivorship exists among overdose loss survivors,” they said.
More information
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more about the opioid overdose epidemic.
SOURCE: RAND Corp., news release, Feb. 21, 2024
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2024 HealthDay. All rights reserved.