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Overdose and Other Drug-Related Deaths Now Closing In on Car Wrecks as Leading Accidental Killer in US

In a report released Wednesday, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) has found that drug-related deaths—the vast majority of them overdoses—increased dramatically between 1999 and 2006, and that drug-related deaths now outpace deaths from motor vehicle accidents in 16 states. That's up from 12 states the previous year and double the eight states in 2003.

More people died from drug-related causes than traffic accidents in the following states: Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, Colorado, Utah, Nevada, Oregon and Washington.

According to CDC researchers, who examined death certificate data from around the country, some 45,000 died in traffic accidents in 2006, while 39,000 people suffered drug-related deaths. About 90% of the drug deaths were from overdoses, but researchers also included in that figure people who died of organ damage from long-term drug use.

Researchers reported a sharp increase in deaths tied to cocaine and to the opioid analgesics, a class of powerful drug that includes fentanyl, methadone, morphine, and popular pain relievers like Vicodin and

Oxycontin. Cocaine-related deaths jumped from about 4,000 in 1999 to more than 7,000 in 2006, but methadone-related deaths increased seven-fold to about 5,000, and other opioid deaths more than doubled from less than 3,000 to more than 6,000. Oddly enough, heroin-related deaths actually declined slightly, hovering just below 2,000 a year throughout the period in question.

And despite all the alarums about young people dying of drug overdoses, the 15-24 age group had the lowest drug-related death rate of any group except those over 65. Only about three per 100,000 young people died of drug-related causes in 2006, compared to six per 100,000 among the 25-34 age group, eight per 100,000 in the 35-44 age group, and 10 per 100,000 in the 45-54 age group.

CDC researchers did not discuss causes for the increase in overall drug-related deaths or the rate of drug-related deaths, but several plausible (and complementary) explanations come to mind: the introduction and widespread use of Oxycontin, the fentanyl-tainted heroin epidemic that appeared in 2006, the increasing non-medical use of prescription pain relievers, and the increasing use of methadone as a pain reliever.

Consequences of Prohibition Overdoses - Poisoned Drug Supply
Politics & Advocacy Executive Branch

Does this research include alcohol?

DO these figures for drug related deaths include alcohol as part of the drug-related deaths? I know that last time stats on Alcohol overdose were published(1998), over 4,000 youths (ages 15-21) died from AOD in that age bracket alone in just 12 counties in the USA.

There needs to be more research done on the harm alcohol causes society. If this research were done, it could be an effective tool in illustrating the differences of degree of harm between pot and alcohol. Something the alcohol industry wants to keep secret fro the public and they've done a very effective job of keeping the public in the dark on this issue.

The report does not mention the word alcohol once.

They refer to drug related overdoses as 'poisoning deaths'. Alcohol overdoses certainly should be included in this category but if the report does include them, it is done sneakily, apparently just lumping them today with other non-analgesic poisoning deaths.
If the numbers don't include alcohol that is a pathetically pro alcohol slant, implying alcohol doesn't cause overdose deaths. If they do include alcohol that is also pathetically pro-alcohol, since it would mean they chose to totally hide that important fact.

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