February 8, 2022

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Overdose deaths caused by opioids in combination with stimulants hit Black communities the hardest

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Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Between 2009 and 2019, overdose deaths in the United States involving opioids and stimulant drugs, such as cocaine and methamphetamine, surged compared to deaths from stimulants alone. Fatalities linked specifically to cocaine combined with opioids rose by nearly 450%, an alarming trend fueled by the growing contamination of non-opioid drugs by fentanyl, an extremely potent synthetic opioid. By 2019, more than three-quarters of deaths involving cocaine and half of those involving methamphetamine or other stimulants also involved opioids.

In the first study of its kind, researchers from NYU Grossman School of Medicine and Wake Forest University School of Medicine analyzed the trend of rising opioid/stimulant deaths by racial/ethnic groups and by state. The findings, published online February 8, 2022 in the American Journal of Epidemiology, indicated that while from opioids and stimulants rose across all and across the country, opioid/stimulant deaths among Black Americans increased at more than three times the rate as non-Hispanic white people—particularly in eastern states. Analysis also found a significant increase in overdose opioid and stimulant deaths among Hispanic and Asian Americans.

The team of investigators found that between 2007 and 2019, the rate of Black Americans dying from opioids and cocaine climbed by 575 percent, compared to 184 percent among white people. While mortality from methamphetamine and other stimulants (MOS) remained at lower levels in 2019 than cocaine/opioid mortality, it has increased dramatically in recent years among Black Americans. MOS/opioid mortality rose 16,200 percent in Black people versus 3,200 percent in white people.  

"While all racial and we examined are dying in greater numbers from opioids combined with stimulants, we are alarmed to see these trends worsening so much faster in marginalized communities that have historically been less affected by the current epidemic," says Tarlise Townsend, Ph.D., a postdoctoral researcher at the Center for Opioid Epidemiology and Policy in the Department of Population Health at NYU Langone, and lead author of the study. "We need to be targeting harm reduction and treatment strategies to those who are being hardest hit."  

 How the study was conducted

To identify deaths caused by opioids in combination with stimulants, the team of investigators analyzed individual certificate data for all deaths coded as overdose from the 2007-2019 National Center for Health Statistics. Deaths were grouped by race and ethnicity (non-Hispanic white, non-Hispanic Black, Hispanic, and non-Hispanic Asian American and Pacific Islander) as well as by state. The researchers analyzed deaths from opioids in combination with cocaine, as well as with methamphetamine and other stimulants (MOS). In order to disaggregate data by racial groups and states, the scientists used special statistical modeling to account for small sample sizes. The analysis found:

"Our results showed that opioid/stimulant mortality varies considerably from state to state, even within a single region. This provides critical information to policymakers and others about the severity and evolution of the crisis in their state," added David Kline, Ph.D., assistant professor in the Department of Biostatistics and Data Science in the Division of Public Health Sciences at Wake Forest School of Medicine, and joint lead author of the study.

Future research is urgently needed to gain a better understanding of the causes of rising / overdose mortality, says Cerdá, particularly in Black and Hispanic communities, and the types of solutions that will be most effective to address this emerging problem.

More information: Tarlise Townsend et al, Racial/ethnic and geographic trends in combined stimulant/opioid overdoses, 2007-2019, American Journal of Epidemiology (2022). doi.org/10.1093/aje/kwab290

Journal information: American Journal of Epidemiology

Provided by NYU Langone Health

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