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Overall drug overdose deaths may have peaked at the end of last year, as the most recent data show a drop of almost 3% in 12-month ending counts from November 2017 to March 2018, according to the National Center for Health Statistics.

Longer-term data, however, show an increase over the year from March 2017 to March 2018, as the short-term decrease was not enough to overcome the previous year’s increase. The provisional 12-month ending count – deaths during the 12-month period ending in the month indicated – went from 66,859 in March 2017 to 68,690 in March 2018, an increase of 2.7%, the NCHS reported.

That year-long increase was not spread evenly among the states. Nebraska’s 12-month ending count jumped over 48% from March 2017 to March 2018, more than twice as much as second-place Hawaii’s 20.9%. Montana had the largest drop over that year, –24.2%, with Wyoming next at –20.7% and the District of Columbia third at –14.8%, data from the National Vital Statistics System show.

“Provisional drug overdose death data are often incomplete,” the NCHS noted, “and the degree of completeness varies by jurisdiction and 12-month ending period. Consequently, the numbers of drug overdose deaths are underestimated, based on provisional data relative to final data and are subject to random variation.”
 

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Overall drug overdose deaths may have peaked at the end of last year, as the most recent data show a drop of almost 3% in 12-month ending counts from November 2017 to March 2018, according to the National Center for Health Statistics.

Longer-term data, however, show an increase over the year from March 2017 to March 2018, as the short-term decrease was not enough to overcome the previous year’s increase. The provisional 12-month ending count – deaths during the 12-month period ending in the month indicated – went from 66,859 in March 2017 to 68,690 in March 2018, an increase of 2.7%, the NCHS reported.

That year-long increase was not spread evenly among the states. Nebraska’s 12-month ending count jumped over 48% from March 2017 to March 2018, more than twice as much as second-place Hawaii’s 20.9%. Montana had the largest drop over that year, –24.2%, with Wyoming next at –20.7% and the District of Columbia third at –14.8%, data from the National Vital Statistics System show.

“Provisional drug overdose death data are often incomplete,” the NCHS noted, “and the degree of completeness varies by jurisdiction and 12-month ending period. Consequently, the numbers of drug overdose deaths are underestimated, based on provisional data relative to final data and are subject to random variation.”
 

 

Overall drug overdose deaths may have peaked at the end of last year, as the most recent data show a drop of almost 3% in 12-month ending counts from November 2017 to March 2018, according to the National Center for Health Statistics.

Longer-term data, however, show an increase over the year from March 2017 to March 2018, as the short-term decrease was not enough to overcome the previous year’s increase. The provisional 12-month ending count – deaths during the 12-month period ending in the month indicated – went from 66,859 in March 2017 to 68,690 in March 2018, an increase of 2.7%, the NCHS reported.

That year-long increase was not spread evenly among the states. Nebraska’s 12-month ending count jumped over 48% from March 2017 to March 2018, more than twice as much as second-place Hawaii’s 20.9%. Montana had the largest drop over that year, –24.2%, with Wyoming next at –20.7% and the District of Columbia third at –14.8%, data from the National Vital Statistics System show.

“Provisional drug overdose death data are often incomplete,” the NCHS noted, “and the degree of completeness varies by jurisdiction and 12-month ending period. Consequently, the numbers of drug overdose deaths are underestimated, based on provisional data relative to final data and are subject to random variation.”
 

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