Consider This from NPR - Fentanyl deaths are plunging, but it's just the first step
Episode Date: March 11, 2025The deadliest phase of the U.S. fentanyl crisis appears to be over. That's according to new research showing fatal overdoses from fentanyl and other street drugs continue to plunge and have now droppe...d from their peak in all 50 states. But with that good news comes with challenges including caring for a larger population of people, who are surviving, but may be deeply unwell.For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Email us at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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We've had an entire community swept away.
You can't even think of all the people that I know that have died.
That's Louise Vincent talking to NPR addiction correspondent Brian Mann a few years ago,
as fentanyl deaths in the US were soaring.
I mean, so many people are dead. My daughter died. Our mentors are dead.
I can barely stand to be here sometimes because of all the trauma and all the people
that we've lost.
Danielle Pletka Vincent, who says that she has used fentanyl
and heroin since she was 13, runs what's called a drug users union.
That's a group that seeks to treat drug users with dignity by giving them a place where
they can get a meal, a cup of coffee, even treatment.
She was speaking to man about harm reduction for drug users.
Vincent is one of the hundreds of thousands of Americans who have been affected by the nation's
opioid crisis, a crisis that has reached almost every corner of the country, including the Cherokee
Nation in Oklahoma. That's where Brian Mann met Gary and Cassie Walker on their family farm a couple years ago.
They've taken in nine Cherokee kids whose parents have been affected by drugs.
All of the children we have adopted or fostered has been because of that.
Being in foster care and going to court cases, and sometimes I would sit there for four to five or six hours,
and I would not only watch one court case, but I would watch 30 or 40 at the same time and it really hit me
then just how big the problem was.
Among the kids they have cared for are a brother and sister, Ransom who's six and
Mazzy who's nine and not the least bit shy.
So I heard you live in New York.
I do I live in New York.
She tells me she really wants to see New York. I do, I live in New York. She tells me she
really wants to see New York and her dad, Gary, speaks up. Tell them why you want to
go to their Mazi. Because there's an American Girl Doll Store. The Walkers began raising
Mazi and Ransom after their parents got caught up with pain pills and fentanyl. We always
remind them that God gave them to us very special and that their parents
were sick and so we were able to raise them. There is mothers out there that
did lose their child and I was able to become their mother so it's just a lot
of emotions. Both Vincent and the Walkers spoke to man back in 2023, the
same year that drug deaths in the US reached their peak
at 114,000, many of which were caused by fentanyl. Data now shows that overall drug deaths in the US
are down nearly a quarter, and that includes fentanyl and other illicit drugs.
Consider this. Drug deaths in the United States are falling, but that good news comes with challenges, including caring for a larger population of people who may be surviving, but who are deeply unwell.
From NPR, I'm Elsa Chang.
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It's Consider This from NPR. The deadliest phase of the U.S. fentanyl crisis appears to be over.
That's according to new research showing that fatal overdoses from fentanyl and other
street drugs continue to plunge and have now dropped from their peak in all 50 states.
NPR addiction correspondent
Brian Mann dug into the numbers and what that drop could mean going forward.
When Neberin Descultas team at the University of North Carolina finished their new analysis
of drug deaths data, they found a positive trend that seemed inconceivable a year ago.
We are on track to return to levels of overdose before fentanyl emerged. Drug deaths
tracked nationwide by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have already plunged
24% from peak levels. Every state has now seen improvement, with many states improving by
30, 40, even 50%. Dasgupta says the number of lives being saved left him stunned. It has been a complete shock, the numbers declining in the way that they have been.
I thought, it's even hard to talk about because it's, after all this time looking at overdose
deaths, this is what we have been hoping for.
Data is one thing, reality on the street can feel very different. This is Kensington, long known as one of the country's most drug-plagued neighborhoods in Philadelphia.
On a warm afternoon, Elena and Vadim lean against a fence, smoking a mix of fentanyl and xylazine.
NPR agreed not to use last names because their drug use is illegal.
I ask how this national shift feels here.
And Elena says she's noticed the change.
Yeah, I can tell that, you know, the numbers drop.
A lot more people also started smoking instead of shooting.
I think that made a difference.
Smoking fentanyl and xylazine is still incredibly risky, but it's considered safer than using
needles.
Vadim says many people who use fentanyl are also
taking smaller doses.
When fentanyl just came out, they were used to shooting heroin in the same amounts. So
that's why they were dying, because you need a lot less.
They say there are more public health services here on the street, and people routinely carry
naloxone or Narcan to reverse fentanyl overdoses. All this has contributed to nearly 2,000 fewer deaths a
year in Pennsylvania alone compared with the peak. Dr. Nora Volkov, who heads the U.S. government's
National Institute on Drug Abuse, says she believes the U.S. as a whole has reached a turning point.
It's very, very exciting to see that it's dramatically decreasing.
While overall drug deaths are down 24 percent, Volkow says deaths linked specifically to fentanyl
are dropping even faster, down more than 30 percent. If that trend holds, the U.S. could
soon return to levels not seen since 2016 when fentanyl hit.
It would be exciting if one returns to those values because fentanyl just turns us all upside
down. Volkhov and Descubta also agree. This shift appears to be long-term and sustainable.
Descubta's deep dive into CDC records found nearly half the states actually saw
recoveries beginning much earlier than once understood, with fatal overdoses peaking back
in 2021 and 2022, then beginning a steady decline.
This is a clear public health improvement,
no matter how you measure it.
It's been sustained in some states for years.
The result nationally is roughly 25,000 fewer drug deaths
every year.
But does Gupta and other addiction experts say
this isn't a time to declare victory?
They describe these improvements more
as a crucial first step, meaning less death, but also a lot more people surviving
with severe addiction and chronic illness needing help. Dr. Ben Cotillaro tweets addiction
patients here in Kensington.
It does seem to be less lethal. Not less dangerous, right? Because we're seeing plenty of other problems that come from it. Xylazine has really bad skin wounds.
Metatomidine has just a terrible withdrawal syndrome.
Disgupta says the trend creates a new challenge.
Initially it's been kind of this panic mode of preventing deaths, but now that we have found some
effective ways to keep people alive, it's really important to try to reach out to them
and help them improve their whole lives.
That's a tall order.
The distance from where the U.S. is now
in places like Kensington
to that kind of public health response feels vast.
On a late winter morning,
Kaylee McLoide with Philadelphia's Overdose Response Unit
sets off on foot across Kensington.
She bends to check on a man huddled and unresponsive. with Philadelphia's Overdose Response Unit sets off on foot across Kensington.
She bends to check on a man huddled and unresponsive.
He's not dead, but he's not okay.
The complicated reality is that more people
surviving fentanyl overdoses will mean more people
needing a whole network of care.
When we say, you know, this person is ready
to go to substance use treatment,
oh, but they have an amputation, they have an open wound, they have incredibly high blood
pressure.
You know, historically, our system is not built for that person.
A few blocks down the street, I meet Tracy Horvath, who says she's lived in Kensington
most of her life, much of that time using fentanyl.
I relapsed like a week ago, but I'm trying to stay clean.
She looks weary and cold, but she is one of the survivors. Horvath too says fentanyl
might have killed her if Narcan weren't so widely available. I only used a little
bit and I still overdosed. I asked what she'd need to move beyond this life,
beyond addiction. Horvath says her first goal is a safe place to live. Stable
housing.
Addiction care experts say getting people off the street into homes is often a crucial step.
But there are so many needs here it can feel overwhelming.
Kayla McLeod says there has been progress building a network of services and support that didn't exist a decade ago.
There's one of our partners, the Kensington Hospital Wound Care Van.
We pass a mobile healthcare team and a food pantry.
There's a special police unit trained in addiction response
in a group from a university dispensing buprenorphine,
a medication that reduces fentanyl cravings.
I meet Scout Gilson working at a syringe exchange
run by a group called Prevention Point.
I was addicted to heroin and then eventually fentanyl.
Gilson, who's in long-term recovery, says she knows firsthand how complicated the health
impacts of drug use can be, from mental health challenges to lingering skin wounds.
I'm covered in scars.
Like I am heavily scarred.
I am pretty much marked forever as a drug user.
But Gilson thinks deeper healing that moves people
beyond survival is possible with the right help.
It's not just pointless suffering.
There's things that are happening.
There's people doing the work.
And there's obvious ways we can improve
and just figuring out how to do that.
In my time in Philadelphia,
I see examples of this hopeful work.
And I meet people like Gilson who've managed to rebuild their lives.
But the need is clearly growing here in Kensington and around the U.S.
One question is whether there will be money to pay for these services.
So far, the Trump administration has focused largely on keeping fentanyl out of the U.S.,
not on programs that help people recover.
Some Republicans in Congress are still talking about budget cuts that could affect Medicaid.
That's the federal program that funds most addiction treatment in the U.S.
I asked Kaylin McLeod with Philadelphia's Overdose Response Unit if she's hopeful, despite
all the desperate need and the uncertainty.
After a moment, she nods a cautious yes. And so we just work our best to help people be well
and keep trying.
But it took years to slow fentanyl deaths in the US.
McLeod says healing people in neighborhoods like Kensington
will take more resources and a lot more time.
That was NPR's Brian Mann in Philadelphia. This episode was produced by Taylor Haney,
Brianna Scott, and Connor Donovan with audio engineering by Arthur Laurent. It was edited
by Courtney Dornig and Andrea De Leon. Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan.
It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Elsa Chang.
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