DYING YOUNG IN WEST VIRGINIA - Mountain State Has Highest Drug Death Rate

(12/05/2018)
Young People in West Virginia are dying young.

New numbers released by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and Prevention includes a startling three-year trend in the United States that hasn't been seen in 100 years.

For the third year in a row in 2017, the U.S. life expectancy rate decreased. According to the CDC, a large part the trend of the decrease has been drug overdoses and suicides.

W.Va. led nation in drug overdose deaths last year.

Addiction is an equal opportunity disease, affecting people from all socio-economic groups.

In an analysis of the data by the Trust for America's Health (TFAH) and Well Being Trust (WBT), West Virginia continued to have the highest rate of drug overdose deaths in 2017, 57.8 deaths per 100,000 people. TFAH and WBT found deaths due to drug overdose and suicide increased last year by 9.6%.

According to the analysis by TFAH and WBT, since 1999 the suicide rate in the country is up by 33-percent.

In West Virginia, there is also a return to meth.

"The main lesson from this is we are still facing an uphill battle and a serious challenge in addressing the opioid epidemic," John Auerbach, the President, and CEO of TFAH, said. "Most of the overdose deaths are related to opioids."

West Virginia's drug overdose death rate in 2017 was an increase from 2016 by 11-percent. Two of the highest states behind West Virginia were Ohio, with a rate of 46.3 deaths per 100,000 and Pennsylvania with a rate of 44.3 deaths per 100,000.

Auerbach said there are multiple factors to this trend in a specific region of the country, including the economy and distribution of illegal drugs.

"This area of the country has seen significant distribution of opioids," he said. "This could also be related as well to access of treatment, primary care as well as drug treatment and related to the economy."

"When unemployment raises, when people face trauma in their life whether financial or personal. It can be a transition in their life coming out correctional facility or coming back from the armed services. People are at an elevated risk for a number of factors that can be partly explaining why we have seen the elevated levels of West Virginia, Ohio, and Pennsylvania."

West Virginia has had one of the highest incarceration rates in the USA.

In more of the analysis of the study by the TFAH and WBT, they found the age range of drug overdose and suicide deaths that increased the most were 25-44 years old, by 11-percent.

"We need to develop a national strategy that incorporates many different components," he said. "When people are addicted we need to make sure they have ready access to drug treatment like health insurance, a bed or residential treatment facility available. We need to have Naloxone ready, an overdose drug reversal and medical assisted treatment such as Buprenorphine."

"We at Trust for America Health also believe we need to think about the pipeline, and how to work more on upstream prevention so that children, adolescents, and young adults are less likely to become addicted."