Summary
Deaths from prescription drug poisoning increased by 68
percent between 1999 and 2004 in the
United
States, becoming second only to motor vehicle crashes as
a cause of unintentional deaths in the country, according to a report by
U.S. investigators.
The report published in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s
publication Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report says that the annual
prescription drug related death rate increased from 4.4 per 100,000 population
in 1999 to 7.1 per 100,000 in 2004.
Dr. L Paulozzi and Dr. J. Annest, the principal
investigators from the CDC stationed in GA write in their report that among all
sex, racial and ethnic groups, non-Hispanic white females were the biggest
victims of the drug poisoning.
More
surprisingly, the most affected were persons aged 15 to 24 years.
The state with the largest increase in the drug poisoning
related death rate was
West Virginia,
where rates rose up to 550 percent.
Arkansas,
Montana,
Maine
and
Oklahoma
were also the leaders of the drug poisoning deaths where the rates ranged from
195 percent to 226 percent.
In contrast,
some states including
Delaware,
Maryland,
New York, and
Rhode Island saw a
decline in accidental poisoning mortality rates.
The most troublesome drugs include psychotherapeutic drugs, narcotics and hallucinogens, and
unspecified drugs, according to the report (this summary is written by
foodconsumer.org).
Unintentional Poisoning Deaths --- United States, 1999--2004
In 2004, poisoning was second only to motor-vehicle crashes as a cause of death from unintentional injury in the
United States (
1). Nearly all poisoning deaths in the United States are attributed to drugs, and most drug poisonings result from
the abuse of prescription and illegal drugs
(
2). Previous reports have indicated a substantial increase in unintentional
poisoning mortality during the 1980s and 1990s
(
2,3).
To further examine this trend, CDC analyzed the most current data from
the National Vital Statistics System. This report summarizes the
results of that analysis, which determined that poisoning mortality
rates in the United States increased each year from 1999 to 2004,
rising 62.5% during the 5-year period. The largest increases were among
females (103.0%), whites (75.8%), persons living in the southern United
States (113.6%), and persons aged 15--24 years (113.3%). Larger rate
increases occurred in states with mostly rural populations. Rates for
drug poisoning deaths increased 68.3%, and mortality rates for
poisonings by other substances increased 1.3%. The largest increases
were in the "other and unspecified," psychotherapeutic, and narcotic
drug categories. The results suggest that more aggressive regulatory,
educational, and treatment measures are necessary to address the
increase in fatal drug overdoses.
Mortality data for 2004 were collected from the National Vital Statistics System
(
1).
Unintentional poisoning deaths that occurred during 1999--2004 were
defined as those with underlying cause-of-death codes X40--X49 from the
International Classification of Diseases, Tenth
Revision
(ICD-10). This category included overdoses of illegal drugs and legal
drugs taken for nonmedical reasons, poisoning from legal drugs taken in
error or at the wrong dose, and poisoning from other substances (e.g.,
alcohol, pesticides, or carbon monoxide). Adverse effects of legal
drugs taken in the proper doses and as directed are coded elsewhere in
ICD-10 and were not included in this analysis. Rates were age adjusted
to the 2000 U.S. Census population using bridged-race* population
figures. Information on the percentage of the population that was
rural, defined as the percentage living in census blocks below a
certain population density, was derived from U.S. Census data for 2000 (
4).
The number of unintentional poisoning deaths increased from
12,186 in 1999 to 20,950 in 2004. The annual age-adjusted rate
increased 62.5%, from 4.4 per 100,000 population in 1999 to 7.1 in
2004. The increase among females, from 2.3 to 4.7 per 100,000
population (103.0%), was twice the increase among males, from 6.5 to
9.5 per 100,000 population (47.1%) (Table 1). Among males, rates among whites, American Indians/Alaska Natives, and Asians/Pacific Islanders all
increased approximately 50%. Rates among black males were highest in 1999 but did not increase. Among females, rates among
whites more than doubled, whereas nonwhites had smaller increases or decreased. Overall, rates increased 75.8% among
whites, 55.8% among American Indians/Alaska Natives, 27.4% among Asians/Pacific Islanders, and 11.2% among blacks.
Rates among non-Hispanics increased more than rates among Hispanics for both sexes. Among all sex and racial/ethnic groups,
the largest increase (136.5%) was among non-Hispanic white females. Among all age groups, the largest increase occurred
among persons aged 15--24 years (113.3%). In 2004, the highest rates were among persons aged 35--54 years, who accounted for
59.6% of all poisoning deaths that year.
From 1999 to 2004, rates increased by less than one third in the Northeast and West but more than doubled in the
South and nearly doubled in the
Midwest.† Delaware, Maryland, New York, and Rhode Island had decreases in rates, and
California had the smallest increase (4.0%) (Figure). States with the largest relative increases were West Virginia (550%),
Oklahoma (226%), Maine (210%), Montana (195%), and
Arkansas (195%). Increases of 100% or more occurred in 23 states:
11.8% (two of 17) of states§
in the most urban tertile, 41.2% (seven of 17) of those in the middle
tertile, and 82.4% (14 of 17) of those in the most rural tertile
(extended Mantel-Haenszel chi-square for linear trend across the
tertiles = 15.4, p<0.001).
The increase in poisoning mortality occurred almost exclusively among persons whose deaths were coded as
unintentional drug poisoning (X40--X44), for which the rate increased 68.3% (Table 2). The rate for poisoning deaths attributed to
other substances (X45--X49) increased 1.3%. By 2004, drug poisoning accounted for 19,838 deaths, 94.7% of all
unintentional poisoning deaths. Among types of drug poisoning, the greatest increases were in the "other and unspecified"
drug, psychotherapeutic drug, and "narcotic and hallucinogen" drug categories.
Reported by:
L Paulozzi, MD, Div of Unintentional Injury Prevention; J Annest, PhD, Office of Statistics and Programming, National
Center for Injury Prevention and Control, CDC.
Editorial Note:
Unintentional drug poisoning mortality rates increased
substantially in the United States during 1999--2004. Previous studies,
using multiple cause-of-death data, have indicated that the trend
described in this report can be attributed primarily to increasing
numbers of deaths associated with prescription opioid analgesics (e.g.,
oxycodone) and secondarily to increasing numbers of overdoses of
cocaine and prescription psychotherapeutic drugs (e.g., sedatives), and
cannot be attributed to heroin, methamphetamines, or other illegal
drugs (
3,5).
The mortality increases might be the result of greater use and abuse of
potentially lethal prescription drugs in recent
years, behaviors that are more common among whites than nonwhites
(
6,7). The substantial increase in deaths among persons
aged 15--24 years is consistent with substantial recent increases in recreational prescription drug and cocaine use among
adolescents and young adults (
8).
Studies by state health agencies have reported recent increases in
prescription-drug--poisoning mortality in rural
communities (
9,10), despite historically higher rates in urban areas. The South and Midwest regions, which had the largest relative
and absolute increases among regions in this study, are the most rural regions of the country
(
4).
Further research is needed to determine how differences in drug use,
drug-abuse--control measures, and demographic characteristics (e.g.,
race/ethnicity) contribute to this pattern.
The findings in this report are subject to at least three
limitations. First, mortality coding assigns the underlying cause of
death to broad drug categories rather than to specific drugs. Second,
death certificates do not reveal the circumstances of drug use. Third,
determining the intent of a person who took a drug is often difficult
for a coroner or medical examiner and might result in
misclassification; some of these deaths might have been suicides,
although not classified as such, and some deaths categorized as
suicides or of undetermined intent might have been unintentional and
therefore not analyzed in this study. The extent of this error is not
known.
Effective response to increasing fatal drug overdoses requires strengthening regulatory measures to reduce unsafe use
of drugs, increasing physician awareness regarding appropriate pharmacologic treatment of pain and psychiatric
problems, supporting best practices for treating drug dependence, and potentially modifying prescription drugs to reduce
their potential for abuse. State agencies that manage
prescription-monitoring programs should use such systems to
proactively identify 1) patients who abuse drugs and fill multiple prescriptions from different health-care providers and 2)
providers whose prescribing practices are outside the standards of appropriate medical care. Both federal and state prevention
measures should be evaluated periodically to determine their effectiveness.
References
- CDC. Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) [Online]. Available at
http://www.cdc.gov/ncipc/wisqars.
- Paulozzi LJ, Ballesteros MF, Stevens JA. Recent trends in
mortality from unintentional injury in the United States. J Safety Res
2006; 37:277--83.
- Paulozzi LJ, Budnitz DS, Xi Y. Increasing deaths from opioid
analgesics in the United States. Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Safety
2006;15:618--27.
- US Department of Commerce, Census Bureau. 2000 Census: summary file 3, table P.5 urban and rural. Available at
http://www.nemw.org/poprural.htm.
- Fingerhut LA. Increases in methadone-related deaths: 1999--2004.
Health E-Stats. Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Health Statistics;
2006. Available at http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/pubs/pubd/hestats/ methadone1999-04/methadone1999-04.htm.
- Simoni-Wastila L. The use of abusable prescription drugs: the role of gender. J Womens Health Gend Based Med 2000;9:289--97.
- Simoni-Wastila L, Ritter G, Strickler G. Gender and other factors
associated with the nonmedical use of abusable prescription drugs.
Subst Use Misuse 2004;39:1--23.
- US Department of Health and Human Services, Substance Abuse and
Mental Health Services Administration Office of Applied Studies.
Results from the 2005 National Survey on Drug Use and Health: national
findings. Rockville, MD: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration; 2006. Available at http://www.oas.samhsa.gov/nsduh/2k5nsduh/2k5results.htm.
- CDC. Increase in poisoning deaths caused by non-illicit drugs ---Utah, 1991--2003. MMWR 2005;54:33--6.
- CDC. Unintentional deaths from drug poisoning by urbanization of area---New Mexico, 1994--2003. MMWR 2005;54:870--3.
* Information about bridged-race categories is available at
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/about/major/dvs/popbridge/popbridge.htm.
† Northeast: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Vermont;
Midwest: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin;
South:
Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, District of Columbia,
Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North
Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and
West Virginia;
West:
Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming.
§ Includes the District of Columbia.