Deaths involving opioids — including fentanyl, the powerful and addictive synthetic drug — accounted for an estimated 44,564 fatalities in 2025.
It’s a significant decrease from 2024, when opioids were involved in 55,296 deaths.
For more than 20 years the United States has faced a severe public health crisis fueled by synthetic opioids that have flooded across the country.
Following a staggering surge in fatalities — in 2022, for example, nearly 108,000 total overdose deaths were recorded — the country has experienced steady declines, a trend confirmed by the latest provisional figures.
READ ALSO: Pfizer Profits Dip As It Ramps R&D Spending For New Drugs
Public health experts say the promising trend can be attributed to several factors, including improved access to naloxone — the opioid overdose antidote known as Narcan, which became available over the counter in the spring of 2023 — as well as improved addiction treatment access.
The distribution of tools like test strips used to screen for fentanyl in illicit drugs also have played a significant role.
But nonprofit organizations like The Drug Policy Alliance have voiced concern that budget cuts under President Donald Trump could threaten progress by curbing resources for addiction and overdose prevention services.
America’s opioid epidemic traces back to the 1990s, when drugmakers aggressively marketed prescription painkillers like OxyContin.
The current wave has been fueled by illicitly manufactured fentanyl, which is often mixed with stimulants such as methamphetamine and cocaine.
Overdose deaths spiked during the Covid-19 pandemic amid healthcare disruptions and deepening mental health challenges.
More than a million Americans have died from drug overdoses over the past two decades.
AFP
The post Overdose Deaths Continue To Decrease Across US appeared first on Channels Television.
