Addiction & Recovery
Related: About this forumMissouri Drug Deaths Increase As National Numbers Fall For The First Time In Decades
This discussion thread was locked by Stuart G (a host of the Addiction & Recovery group).
The number of drug-related deaths increased by 16% last year, as fatal overdoses declined by an estimated 5.1% nationwide, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Missouri is one of 17 states that saw a rise in drug-related deaths last year. In 34 states, the number of deaths declined. Only Delaware had a higher increase over the previous year, at 16.7%.
Addiction treatment advocates point to Missouris decision to not expand Medicaid and the states belated response to treating the opioid overdose crisis, which according to the CDC killed an estimated 1,635 Missourians in 2018.
Were a conservative state that hasnt invested heavily, because we think these are social issues, said Dr. Will Ross, chairman of the St. Louis Joint Boards of Health and Hospitals. Were not really seeing this as a public health crisis until recently.
https://news.stlpublicradio.org/post/missouri-drug-deaths-increase-national-numbers-fall-first-time-decades#stream/0
Blues Heron
(6,130 posts)"We're not really seeing this as a public health crisis cuz lets face it - as conservatives, we're a little slow. " fixed your thought for you Doc. Wake up dude. Your people are dying from drug prohibition just like they did from bathtub gin in the 20's during alcohol prohibition. Don't force it underground, that's where you totally lose control and people start dying in droves from tainted, unpredictable drugs.
Nay
(12,051 posts)health care crisis because, deep down, we think disgusting addicts should just go somewhere and die."
There, fixed it!
aliza20
(18 posts)Many conservative states like Missouri have less, if any, needle exchange programs and other harm reduction services where Narcan is given.