America's opioid crisis: Overdose deaths reaching record highs amid pandemic

America's overdose crisis reached new levels over the past year as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.

Fatal drug overdoses surged by 28.5% for the 12-month period ending April 2021, according to the latest provisional data from the CDC's National Center for Health Statistics, with research predicting 100,306 overdose deaths.

"An American dying every 5 minutes," Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra said on a press call. "That's game changing."

Synthetic opioids like fentanyl were by far the main driver of these fatal overdoses, accounting for more than 63% of opioid-related deaths, along with methamphetamine, according to DEA Administrator Anne Milgram.

Kenny Klingele stands near his father, Herb, as they discuss Kenny's son, Sequoyah, who died of a drug overdose in La Honda, California, July 20, 2021. REUTERS/Brittany Hosea-Small
Kenny Klingele stands near his father, Herb, as they discuss Kenny's son, Sequoyah, who died of a drug overdose in La Honda, California, July 20, 2021. REUTERS/Brittany Hosea-Small · Brittany Hosea-Small / reuters

"The amount of illegal fentanyl in our country has written an unprecedented level," Milgram said on the call. "This year alone, the DEA has seized enough fentanyl to provide every member of United States population with a lethal dose. And we are still seizing more fentanyl each and every day. Synthetic fentanyl and methamphetamine are driving the overdose crisis in America."

Katharine Harris, a Glassell fellow in drug policy at Rice University, was not surprised at all by the numbers.

“By the end of 2020, we knew that the number of overdoses for 2020 were going to be higher than any other year previously,” she told Yahoo Finance. “I think that it became pretty clear early on that any kind of optimism in 2019 that maybe there would be a downward trend in overdoses was very quickly obliterated by that provisional data from 2020 that we saw.”

Pandemic 'worsened a lot of things'

The coronavirus pandemic has had devastating effects on people’s mental health, whether due to social isolation, loss of loved ones, financial instability, or loss of employment.

“You hear stories of people who are in recovery for a few years and then all of a sudden they lose their jobs … they’re anxious, they’re stressed, and so they relapse,” Bryce Pardo, a policy researcher at the RAND Corporation, told Yahoo Finance. “And because they’re relapsing, they don’t have a tolerance anymore, and they go out and the market is transitioning to a much more potent variant of a drug being sold.”

For those struggling with substance use disorder, the pandemic also “curtailed access that people had to certain harm reduction services,” Harris noted. This includes methadone clinics and rehabilitation services.

“It became a lot harder for some people, for example, to get access to their methadone and things like that, although a lot of cities have taken great pains to try to make sure that people still have access,” she continued. “There are a lot of needle exchange programs, for example, that have tried to remain open. Some cities like New York had methadone delivery programs, so there have been efforts to try and make sure people still get the services that they need at the same time.”