Opioid overdose death rates increased for nearly all racial and ethnic groups in metropolitan areas between 2015 and 2017, according to a new report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Blacks experienced the largest absolute and percentage increases, with a 103% increase in overdose deaths in large cities and a 361% increase in overdoses involving synthetic opioids. Synthetic opioids were involved in nearly 60% of opioid-involved overdose deaths in 2017. “Culturally competent interventions are needed to target populations at risk; these interventions include increasing awareness about synthetic opioids in the drug supply and expanding evidence-based interventions, such as naloxone distribution and medication-assisted treatment,” the authors said. In 2018, drug overdose deaths declined 5.1% to about 68,000, according to preliminary data released by the CDC in July.

Related News Articles

Headline
Access to quality mental and physical health services can be a complex challenge, but for individuals of color and people with severe or chronic mental…
Blog
ESPAÑOLWhat if one conversation can change, or even save, a life? That was the question AdventHealth sought to answer, as the health system launched a…
Blog
Melony G. Griffith President & CEO Maryland Hospital AssociationGrowing up in Great Falls, Mont., raised by two military veterans and public…
Blog
The Meharry School of Global Health is the realization of a promise made by Meharry Medical College almost 150 years ago — a promise born out of the legacy of…
Headline
As part of Community Health Improvement Week June 10-14, the AHA released a video showcasing the impact Indiana University Health's iHEART collaborative has…
Headline
The AHA announced June 5 that Main Line Health in Radnor, Pa., Augusta Health in Fishersville, Va., and AnMed in Anderson, S.C., are the three honorees for…