Opioid overdose has become a national crisis. It's not just affecting drug users in other cities. It's affecting our co-workers, our neighbors, our friends and our family members. According to new research, the opioid overdose crisis will claim a record number of lives this year.
He continued, "We have the same thing now - Oxycontin ads in medical journals where doctors would say, ‘Opioids are good for treating pain. They don’t have addictive potential.’ It’s possible 20 years from now, we’re going to look back and say, ‘I cannot believe we promoted these dangerous, addictive medications that are only marginally more effective.'"
According to the STAT analysis, the annual death toll from opioids will rise about 35% between 2015 and 2017. They predict that up to 650,000 people may die from opioids over the next ten years.
Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein said that the United States experienced the largest increase in drug deaths in recorded history in 2016. Over 60,000 lives were claimed to overdose.
The Opioid Epidemic
There are nearly 100 deaths per day from opioids, and it's about to get worse. According to an analysis conducted by STAT, opioids may claim nearly half a million lives in the next decade. The analysis involved public health experts at 10 universities throughout the United States and more than 40 interviews conducted with politicians and leading medical professionals. Dr. Michael Barnett, assistant professor of health policy and management at Harvard University, explained that the damage done by over-prescribing painkillers will take years to undo. "It's like cigarettes in the '50's: We look back at the way people smoked and promoted cigarettes as laughably backwards," he said.
