The other day I posted some charts covering drug addiction. in the US. The first Bar Chart below matches up with Figure 3 in that post “Drug Overdose Death Rates in the US,” Angry Bear. Today’s post as taken from the Senate Joint Economic Committee fleshes out the numbers cited there and also here in the first chart below. It was more than just people catching Covid. There was a significant increase in the numbers of US citizens inflicted with Opioid use disorder commonly called addiction. There were other issues being the result of or aggravated by the pandemic which have not been discussed or revealed. Costs increased by approximately 50% from the earlier year. This you will see in the second chart. ~~~~~~~~ The Economic Toll of the
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The other day I posted some charts covering drug addiction. in the US. The first Bar Chart below matches up with Figure 3 in that post “Drug Overdose Death Rates in the US,” Angry Bear. Today’s post as taken from the Senate Joint Economic Committee fleshes out the numbers cited there and also here in the first chart below. It was more than just people catching Covid. There was a significant increase in the numbers of US citizens inflicted with Opioid use disorder commonly called addiction.
There were other issues being the result of or aggravated by the pandemic which have not been discussed or revealed.
Costs increased by approximately 50% from the earlier year. This you will see in the second chart.
~~~~~~~~
The Economic Toll of the Opioid Crisis Reached Nearly $1.5 Trillion in 2020, Senate JEC, Chairman Don Beyer.
As a result of the pandemic, the U.S. health care system was disrupted, reducing access to substance abuse treatment and exacerbating social and economic stress that can worsen addiction. This contributed to a significant increase in the number of Americans diagnosed with opioid use disorder and in the number of fatal opioid overdoses.
In addition to its effects on survivors, families and communities, the spike in opioid use disorder cases and fatal overdoses during the pandemic increased the economic toll of the opioid crisis in 2020. Adapting an approach used by researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the Joint Economic Committee estimates the opioid epidemic cost the United States nearly $1.5 trillion in 2020 alone. This is up 37% from 2017, when the CDC last measured the cost.
The coronavirus pandemic also shed light on the racial disparities among those suffering from opioid use. Although opioid use is more common among white Americans, Black adults and teens experienced a steeper increase in the rate of fatal opioid overdoses compared to their white counterparts over the last decade.
To help address the opioid epidemic, federal legislation and efforts by the Biden administration have improved access to and funding for the medication and treatment services needed to reduce addiction. However, given the scale of the crisis, more funding and action across federal, state and local government is needed to better address the crisis at hand.
Opioid cases increased during the coronavirus pandemic, costing the United States an estimated $1.5 trillion in 2020.
Opioid use increased during the pandemic, leading to the highest number of opioid-related deaths on record in the United States. The data show 2020 and 2021 saw the highest numbers of fatal opioid overdoses ever reported, with 69,061 and 80,926 fatalities, respectively (see graph below), and opioids are the main driver of drug overdose deaths. In 2020, 2.7 million people over the age of 12 were reported to suffer from opioid use disorder, a significant increase compared to the 1.9 million cases in 2019.
An analysis by the Joint Economic Committee finds that opioid-related costs rose to nearly $1.5 trillion in 2020, a $487 billion increase from 2019 and a 37% increase from 2017 (see graph below). JEC staff produced these estimates by adapting a methodology used by the CDC to estimate the cost of the opioid epidemic in 2017 to create similar estimates for 2018, 2019 and 2020.1
While this analysis does not forecast the economic cost of the opioid epidemic for 2021, the rise in fatal opioid overdoses in 2021 suggests the total cost is likely to continue to increase. In addition, the methodology used to produce the totals above involves some uncertainty that likely makes the national cost estimate a lower-boundary on the true economic cost of the epidemic in a given year.2
Coronavirus pandemic disruptions created new barriers for people diagnosed with opioid use disorder.
The coronavirus pandemic created disruptions to worldwide health care systems and treatment services. Clinics shifted to telehealth and remote work to protect health care workers and patients from COVID-19, which disrupted treatment for some patients who depended on face-to-face care. Additionally, the disruption around the pandemic meant that some users turned to new dealers, who were more likely to sell them fentanyl due to changes in drug smuggling patterns. Because fentanyl is such a potent drug and is sometimes present in drug supplies without users’ knowledge, this shift increased the likelihood of overdose among people using opioids.
Pandemic-related stress and additional barriers to care likely also led to increased relapse rates among those who struggle with opioid use. Factors like self-isolation and the economic shock of the pandemic were linked to higher levels of stress, anxiety and other mental health issues, which worsened conditions for those with substance use disorder. It is likely that pandemic disruptions to health care, addiction treatment and mental health played an important role in the increase in opioid use disorder and fatal overdoses during this period.
The opioid crisis disproportionately hurts Black Americans and increases economic inequality
While white Americans make up the majority of those who overdose from opioids, Black Americans are disproportionately impacted by the opioid crisis and have experienced a steep increase in the rate of fatal opioid overdoses over the last five years. In 2020, Black Americans accounted for 12.4% of people living in the United States but 17% of U.S. fatal opioid overdoses—an increase of 5 percentage points from 2017. Similarly, the overdose rate from synthetic opioids rose faster for Black teenagers than the national rate for teenagers overall over the past two years.
Higher rates of opioid use disorder and fatal overdoses create a particularly serious threat to Black Americans, who experience inequitable access to addiction treatment. Specifically, structural barriers mean Black Americans are less likely to have access to affordable health care, evidence-based treatment and prescribed medications that can reduce the risk of fatal opioid overdoses. Racial inequities in access to health care and addiction treatment likely demonstrate
that Black Americans face a steeper economic cost due to the opioid epidemic than white Americans, further exacerbating racial inequality.
The federal government has taken important recent steps to fund effective treatment programs and addiction prevention tools to combat the opioid epidemic
As the opioid crisis has worsened in recent years, federal, state and local governments have increased investments in drug treatment and prevention programs. In 2016, President Obama signed into law the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act to address the opioid epidemic that was centered around six pillars: prevention, treatment, recovery, law enforcement, criminal justice reform and overdose reversal. In 2019, the federal government awarded $1.8 billion in grants to help states fight the opioid epidemic, including $900 million in grants over three years allocated to the CDC to help states and localities track overdose data and develop treatment strategies and $932 million awarded in State Opioid Response grants to all 50 states.
More recently, the American Rescue Plan Act (ARP) and other actions by the Biden administration provided nearly $5.5 billion in 2021 for mental health and substance abuse prevention block grants and committed $1.5 billion for State Opioid Response grants in 2022. Additionally, some states and localities used Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds from the ARP to provide behavioral health, addiction prevention and treatment programs to help tackle the opioid epidemic. In April 2022, President Biden released his administration’s inaugural National Drug Control Strategy emphasizing a harm reduction approach that prioritizes life-saving tools like naloxone, drug test strips and syringe services programs. The strategy also focuses on improving the availability of evidence-based treatment, particularly for those at highest risk of an overdose.
Additional federal action is needed to address the opioid crisis, better understand its impacts on marginalized communities and address its economic toll
The scale of the opioid epidemic demands large and significant action to reduce both the human and economic toll. While recent policy commitments are important steps, the $1.5 trillion annual cost highlighted in this brief suggests the size and scope of the government’s response must be significantly larger. The federal government should address barriers to health care and expand access to evidence-based treatment by continuing a shift towards a “treatment instead of punishment” approach that prioritizes medical treatment and support services over incarceration. One additional step to support treatment would be for the 12 states that have yet to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act to do so, as Medicaid expansion is associated with reduced fatal opioid overdoses through greater access to treatment.
Similarly, the federal government should further fund the Overdose Data to Action program to collect data on overdose deaths from all U.S. jurisdictions. This expanded approach to opioid data collection will help researchers and policymakers estimate the exact cost and impact of the opioid crisis and pave the path to better understand and resolve the epidemic. The federal response should also do its part to lessen the societal stigma around substance use disorder, in large part to encourage those struggling with opioid use to enroll in treatment services.
Although there is a long road ahead to address the opioid epidemic and its impact on communities, allocating funding, expanding treatment access and improving understanding of the crisis are important next steps to reduce the toll of the epidemic on the United States.
Footnotes:
1 The JEC calculated new estimates of the economic toll of opioid use disorder and fatal opioid overdoses for 2018 through 2020—the most recent year for which data is available. These JEC estimates were calculated by multiplying the CDC per capita cost estimate of opioid use disorder and fatal opioid overdose from 2017 by the total number of opioid use disorder cases and fatal opioid overdoses in 2018, 2019 and 2020, and then adjusting the total costs for inflation to put each totalin 2020 dollars.The 2017 total was also adjusted for inflation into 2020 dollars. The CDC produced its original estimatesfor the cost of opioid use disorder and fatal opioid overdoses by accounting for the costs of health care, public safety, lost productivity, lower quality of life and lives lost due to opioids. The JEC cost estimates are limited to only going through2020 because the data on the number of people with opioid use disorders in 2021 will not be released until later this year.
2 One limitation of the approach is that the National Survey on Drug Use and Health excludes people who are unhoused or incarcerated due to sampling difficulty, although people in those situations are disproportionately hurt by the opioid epidemic. Similarly, the CDC’s original cost estimates cannot account for how opioid use disorder and fatal overdoses impact the quality of life of the friends, family and community members who are also burdened by the epidemic. SAMHSA cautionsthat comparing 2020 survey data to previous years is complicated by the impacts of the coronavirus pandemic on survey data collection and because of the recent implementation of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental DisordersFifth Edition(DSM-5), which classifies substance use disorder differently than previous editions.
Drug Overdose Death Rates in the US, Angry Bear
Opioid Use since 1968 and Why It’s Abuse Increased, Angry Bear
Senator Manchin Telling a Story – Angry Bear