FDA/CDC

Opioid deaths in the ED increase nationally


 

FROM MMWR

Opioid-related deaths in emergency departments increased by approximately 30% across all regions of the United States between 2016 and 2017, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Analysis of 91 million ED visits from the CDC’s National Syndromic Surveillance Program and Enhanced State Opioid Overdose Surveillance database found significant increases in opioid overdose deaths in 16 states, reaching as high as 109% in Wisconsin and 106% in Delaware, CDC officials said during a press briefing.

Dr. Anne Schuchat

“We are currently seeing the highest drug overdose death rate ever recorded in the United States, driven by prescription opioids and by illicit opioids such as heroin and illicitly manufactured fentanyl,” said Anne Schuchat, MD, acting CDC director. “In 2016, there were more than 63,000 drug overdose deaths, and more than 42,000 of those deaths involved an opioid.”

Of the 91 million visits, a total of 261,755 were suspected of opioid overdoses across both databases.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Malpractice Counsel: Missed Eye Injury: The Importance of the Visual Examination
MDedge Emergency Medicine
‘Chronic Lyme’: Serious bacterial infections reported with unproven treatments
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Endo removes Opana ER from market
MDedge Emergency Medicine
U.S. opioid, heroin overdose deaths may be one-fifth higher than reported
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Nontraumatic Disc Herniation as a Cause of Unusual Cervical Spondylotic Myelopathy
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Thyroid Cartilage Fracture in Context of Noncompetitive "Horseplay" Wrestling
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Opioid management protocol lowered trauma patient pain medication use
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Malpractice Counsel: A Pain in the…Scrotum
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Malpractice Counsel: Don’t Miss Popeye
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Complications of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus in the Emergency Department
MDedge Emergency Medicine