Addiction & Recovery
Related: About this forumThis City's Overdose Deaths Have Plunged. Can Others Learn From It?
'Dayton, Ohio, had one of the highest overdose death rates in the nation in 2017. The city made many changes, and fatal overdoses are down more than 50 percent from last year.
Dr. Randy Marriott clicked open the daily report he gets on drug overdoses in the county. Only one in the last 24 hours stunningly low compared to the long lists he used to scroll through last year in a grim morning routine.
They just began to abruptly drop off, said Dr. Marriott, who oversees the handoff of patients from local rescue squads to Premier Health, the regions biggest hospital system.
Overdose deaths in Montgomery County, anchored by Dayton, have plunged this year, after a stretch so bad that the coroners office kept running out of space and having to rent refrigerated trailers. The county had 548 overdose deaths by Nov. 30 last year; so far this year there have been 250, a 54 percent decline.
Dayton, a hollowed-out manufacturing center at the juncture of two major interstates, had one of the highest opioid overdose death rates in the nation in 2017 and the worst in Ohio. Now, it may be at the leading edge of a waning phase of an epidemic that has killed hundreds of thousands of people in the United States over the last decade, including nearly 50,000 last year.
For the first time in years, the number of opioid deaths nationwide has begun to dip, according to preliminary data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention with totals for the preceding 12 months falling slightly but steadily between December 2017 and April 2018. The flattening curve along with declining opioid prescription rates and survey data suggesting far fewer Americans tried heroin last year and more got addiction treatment is the first encouraging news in a while.
While its too soon to know if the improvement is part of a long-term trend, it is clear there are some lessons to be learned from Dayton. The New York Times spent several days here interviewing police and public health officials; doctors, nurses and other treatment providers; people recovering from opioid addiction and people who are still using heroin and other drugs.
They point to a variety of factors they believe have contributed to the sharp drop in mortality.
Medicaid expansion hugely increased access to treatment. . .
Carfentanil, an incredibly toxic fentanyl analog, has faded. . .
Naloxone is everywhere. . .
There is more support for people when treatment ends. . .
Police and public health workers actually agree.'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/25/health/opioid-overdose-deaths-dayton.html