The National Institutes of Health yesterday released a study revealing a 38% increase in the opioid overdose death rate for non-Hispanic Black people in four states during 2018-2019. The authors said data from New York suggests that certain racial groups benefit unequally from prevention and treatment efforts, as opioid overdose death rates declined by 18% for non-Hispanic white people and remained unchanged for non-Hispanic Black people. Overall, the rates of opioid deaths, driven by heroin and fentanyl, remained steady or decreased for other racial and ethnic groups. The NIH said the study aligns with other research demonstrating widening disparities in overdose deaths in Black communities, systemic racism and the need for equitable and community-based interventions.

Related News Articles

Headline
A National Institutes of Health study published April 2 found that blood pressure patterns observed during the first half of pregnancy can determine a woman's…
Headline
A study published March 31 by the National Institutes of Health found that adults living in rural areas have worse cardiovascular health than those in urban…
Headline
The Food and Drug Administration Jan. 30 announced it approved Journavx (suzetrigine) oral tablets, a first-in-class non-opioid drug, to treat moderate to…
Headline
In this conversation, Vinnidhy Dave, D.O., hospice specialist and director of palliative medicine at Englewood Health Physician Network, and Lauren Savage,…
Headline
The AHA yesterday released its 2025 Advocacy Agenda that details the association's key priorities for Congress, the Administration, regulatory agencies and…
Headline
In this conversation, three experts from Boston Medical Center discuss the development of its Health Equity Accelerator, the partnerships needed to sustain the…