United States 7/20/2009 10:31:32 PM
News / Education

Crisis Drug Addiction Overdose Deaths

Accidental drug overdose has become the second leading cause of death i

Accidental drug overdose has become the second leading cause of death in America and for adults ages 35-54 it is the number one killer. This data, compiled by the Centers for Disease Control, reveals an alarming trend to the use and abuse of drugs, both legal and illegal.

The Archives of Internal Medicine reports that accidental overdose deaths rose sharply over the past 20 years due in part to the rising at-home use of prescription painkillers and other potent medications, which previously were primarily used in hospitals.

 According to CDC medical epidemiologist Leonard J. Paulozzi,:
“One might assume that the increase in drug overdose deaths is due to an increased use of street drugs like heroin and cocaine, because we have in the past associated such drugs with overdoses. However …we found that street drugs were not behind the increase. The increase from 1999 to 2004 was driven largely by opioid analgesics (painkillers), with a smaller contribution from cocaine, and essentially no contribution from heroin. The number of deaths in the narcotics category that involved prescription opioid analgesics increased from 2,900 in 1999 to at least 7,500 in 2004, an increase of 160 percent in just five years. By 2004, opioid painkiller deaths numbered more than the total of deaths involving heroin and cocaine in this category.”
One school of thought to help curb this problem is that of harm reduction.

Proponents of the harm reduction approach to drug addiction promote that teaching
drug addicts how to use drugs safely is the best approach to curb the negative effects of drug abuse. 

However, it seems unlikely that persons in the throes of addiction, and frequently high, will be the best of students.   

Harm reduction programs do nothing to change the way addicts behave.  Methadone is a prime example. Methadone clinics operate as a business; they receive incentives from the drug manufactures as well as income from their clients.  The clients are chained like a ball and chain to the clinic – if they miss their daily visit they are beset with withdrawal.  They are still alive, through harm reduction, but it is hardly a life worth living for some.

The best insight and ultimate answers to drug addiction would most likely come from families who have either lost a loved one to addiction or families who have gotten the family member back from
drug addiction and back into life.  These are people who have been through it and will care.  They should be included in any serious studies that are actually looking for solutions.

It is going to take some compassion to really address the suffering extant in this country because of drug addiction.