In yet another sign of just how deadly the U.S. opioid epidemic has become, researchers report a sevenfold increase in the number of drivers killed in car crashes while under the influence of prescription painkillers.
칠곡출장만남 vehicle crash in California, Hawaii, Illinois, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and West Virginia. These states routinely test for drugs in people who have died in car crashes.
Of the nearly 37,000 drivers in the analysis, 24 percent had drugs in their system, of which 3 percent were prescription narcotics, the researchers found.
Among the 3 percent of drivers who tested positive for prescription narcotics, 30 percent also had high levels of alcohol and 67 percent had traces of other drugs, Chihuri and Li said.
More women than men tested positive for prescription narcotics — 4 percent versus 3 percent.
Among male drivers killed in car crashes, the prevalence of prescription narcotics increased from less than 1 percent between 1995 and 1999 to slightly over 5 percent between 2010 and 2015. Among women, the increase went from slightly over 1 percent to more than 7 percent within the same time frame, the researchers found.
The report was published online recently in the American Journal of Public Health.
“The opioid epidemic has been defined primarily by the counts of overdose fatalities,” Li said in a statement. “Our study suggests that increases in opioid consumption may carry adverse health consequences far beyond overdose morbidity and mortality.”
One travel safety expert said it’s difficult to tell if the increased presence of prescription painkillers was due to increased testing for it over time.
Also, it isn’t clear if the protocols used to test drivers who died in car crashes was the same from state to state, said Jim Hedlund, a spokesman for the Governors Highway Safety Association.
From these data, the extent to which narcotic painkillers were the cause of a car crash also isn’t clear. “The presence of a drug doesn’t imply impairment,” Hedlund said.
“Despite that, I believe the conclusions of the study are correct. They are finding more opioids in dead drivers than they were 20 years ago,” he added. “That goes along with the trend in society of more opioids being prescribed and more opioid deaths.
“It’s up to doctors and pharmacists to tell their patients that these drugs can impair driving and not to take them when they drive,” Hedlund said.
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