News

Prescription opioid overdoses targeted in new CDC program


 

References

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has launched a program aimed at helping states combat and prevent opioid drug overdoses.

The Prescription Drug Overdose: Prevention for States program will be launching in 16 states chosen in a competitive application process. The CDC is committing $20 million in fiscal year 2015, and each state will receive $750,000 to $1 million each year for the next 4 years to advance prevention in several areas, such as enhancing prescription drug–monitoring programs, putting prevention into action in communities nationwide, and investigating the connection between prescription opioid abuse and heroin use, the CDC said in a press release.

In 2013, 16,000 people died from prescription opioid overdoses, four times more than in 1999, with prescription of opioids increasing at the same rate over the same time. Despite more opioids being prescribed, the amount of pain Americans report has not changed. In addition, heroin deaths also have spiked, with the 8,000 heroin overdose deaths nearly three times as many as in 2010.

“The prescription drug overdose epidemic requires a multifaceted approach, and states are key partners in our efforts on the front lines to prevent overdose deaths. With this funding, states can improve their ability to track the problem, work with insurers to help providers make informed prescribing decisions, and take action to combat this epidemic,” U.S. Department of Health & Human Services Secretary Sylvia M. Burwell said in the release.

Find the full CDC press release here.

lfranki@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

Heroin use up across demographic groups from 2002 to 2013
MDedge Psychiatry
A serious catch-22 for doctors prescribing pain meds
MDedge Psychiatry
Exposure to medical marijuana advertising increases usage risk in adolescents
MDedge Psychiatry
How to prevent misuse of psychotropics among college students
MDedge Psychiatry
Managing hospitalized methadone–maintained patients
MDedge Psychiatry
Stressors associated with drug misuse
MDedge Psychiatry
Pamela Hyde steps down from top SAMHSA post
MDedge Psychiatry
E-cigarettes precede tobacco smoking in ninth-graders
MDedge Psychiatry
Alcohol, marijuana use common in youth with chronic disease
MDedge Psychiatry
One in 20 students using e-cigarettes for cannabis
MDedge Psychiatry