One in every five deaths in young adults is opioid-related in the United States: study

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http://www.stmichaelshospital.com/media/detail.php?source=hospital_news/2018/0601

One out of every five deaths among young adults in the United States is related to opioids, suggests a study led by researchers in Canada.

The study, published today in JAMA Network Open and led by St. Michael’s Hospital in Toronto, ON, found that the percentage of deaths attributable to opioids in the U.S. increased by 292 per cent from 2001 to 2016, with one in every 65 deaths related to opioid use by 2016. This number varied by age group and sex. Men represented nearly 70 per cent of all opioid deaths by 2016, and the highest burden was among young adults aged 24 to 35 years. This study expands on research in Canadian populations.

“Despite the amount of attention that has been placed on this public health issue, we are increasingly seeing the devastating impact that early loss of life from opioids is having across the United States,” said Dr. Tara Gomes, a scientist in the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute of St. Michael’s. “In the absence of a multidisciplinary approach to this issue that combines access to treatment, harm reduction and education, this crisis will impact the U.S. for generations.”

Researchers reviewed all deaths in the U.S. between 2001 and 2016 using the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) WONDER Multiple Cause of Death Online Database. This record captures mortality and population estimates across the U.S. by age and sex. The most dramatic increase in illicit and prescribed opioid-related deaths was seen in those aged 24 to 35. By 2016, 20 per cent of all deaths in this age group were related to opioid use - up from only 4 per cent in 2001.

Dr. Gomes, who is also a scientist at the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences in Ontario, and her team found that a total of 1,681,359 years of life were lost prematurely to opioid-related causes in 2016, which exceeds the years of life lost each year from hypertension, HIV/AIDS and pneumonia in the U.S.

“These numbers show us the dramatic impact of opioid-related harms across all demographics in the U.S.,” Dr. Gomes said. “We know this is not an isolated public health issue – it is one that spans across North America.”

This study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and supported by the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences.

Hmm. I wonder the majority of heroin comes from....

https://www.state.gov/j/inl/rls/rm/2017/268146.htm
My estimate is that between 90 and 94 percent of all heroin consumed in the United States comes from Mexico. My estimate is that a very tiny percentage now, perhaps as little as 2 percent to 4 percent, comes from Colombia. And the remainder, which might be somewhere in the 4 to 6 percent category, comes from Asia, the majority of that coming from Afghanistan.

Maybe a wall wouldn't be so bad.
 
Come on man you think a wall will fix shit?
Is basics economics man, if there is demand there has to be a supply.
We keep blaming mexico for the drug problems we have, when in reality we are the number one drug consumer in the world.
If Germany was our south neighbor we will probably be having a "German problem" too.
Stop doing drugs and that's it.
 
A wall definitely wont stop drugs from coming in. It may make things more expensive for a certain amount of time, executions may become even more brutal, for a certain amount of time, and body parts may be strewn across the wall, for a certain amount of time, but drugs definitely wont stop coming over.
 
Honestly not trolling at all, people need to stop being such pussies with surgery and pain meds. I've had back and two knee surgeries and never touched the stuff. Obviously you can't help it if they inject you with morphine in the hospital. We really need to develop a non addictive pain med
 
Come on man you think a wall will fix shit?
Is basics economics man, if there is demand there has to be a supply.
We keep blaming mexico for the drug problems we have, when in reality we are the number one drug consumer in the world.
If Germany was our south neighbor we will probably be having a "German problem" too.
Stop doing drugs and that's it.
I think @Kvolcom said it best, we take no accountability for our own actions. Its everyone else's fault. Fuck I hate agreeing with that guy.
 
Man nowadays it's not just about getting your St. John's Ambulance ticket for CPR to pad the stats on your CV.

They're actually handing out serum at my work.

nax%2Bpic.jpg
 
absolutely nothing to do with the mass pushing of painkillers by pharma companies, doctors,distributors, and the fortunes to be made from selling it and turning a blind eye , lobbying for it............................no sir.....

must be mexicans
 
absolutely nothing to do with the mass pushing of painkillers by pharma companies, doctors,distributors, and the fortunes to be made from selling it and turning a blind eye , lobbying for it............................no sir.....

must be mexicans
I will believe the war on drugs is honest when Pharm execs start going to jail.
 
absolutely nothing to do with the mass pushing of painkillers by pharma companies, doctors,distributors, and the fortunes to be made from selling it and turning a blind eye , lobbying for it............................no sir.....

must be mexicans
"Try this. Tell me how you feel in two weeks. This one is new, may be a little stronger."

:sniper:
 
Thanks Mexico

Creative way to kill a certain demographic
 
That's fucking depressing
 
absolutely nothing to do with the mass pushing of painkillers by pharma companies, doctors,distributors, and the fortunes to be made from selling it and turning a blind eye , lobbying for it............................no sir.....

must be mexicans
Simple fix, just build walls around pharmacies so that druggies can't get in.
 
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