HealthDay (12/3, Mundell) reports, “For people struggling with drug addiction, 2020 has triggered a big rise in emergency” department “visits for cardiac arrest tied to drug overdoses,” investigators concluded “based on data involving 80% of emergency medical services (EMS) ‘activations’ across the” US. After analyzing “data on nearly 26 million EMS calls in 2020,” researchers found that overdose-related “cardiac arrests reached a peak in May, when lockdowns began to really take hold across the” US.
MedPage Today (12/3, Hlavinka) reports, “As of Oct. 31, 2020, all but nine U.S. states had reported increases in opioid-related mortality, according to the American Medical Association.” Investigators posited that “the pandemic may have disrupted the supply of narcotics for some patients, leading them to consume drugs that have traces of fentanyl or other substances triggering an overdose.” In addition, “the psychological and financial tolls of the pandemic may also be driving people to use substances more often.” The findingswere published online Dec. 3 in a research letter in JAMA Psychiatry.
Related Links:
— “Pandemic Is Driving U.S. Surge in Cardiac Arrests Tied to Overdose ” Ernie Mundell, HealthDay, December 3, 2020