Deaths due to drugs
DEATHS : DUE TO DRUGS
Drug dependence is
characterized as a chronic disease with many relapses. Substitution maintenance
therapy with methadone or buprenorphine improves the health and social
performance of opioid-dependent people and decreases the use of illicit drugs
and the crime rate. Statistics show that investment in prevention pays off
well: every dollar invested in drug treatment saves seven dollars in health and
social costs.
Dextropropoxyphene is
a synthetic weak opioid used as analgesic both as standalone as well as in
combination with acetaminophen for more than 50 years. Ministry of Health and
Family Welfare, Government of India has issued a gazette notification (dated
May 23, 2013) suspending the manufacture, sale, and distribution of dextropropoxyphene
and formulations containing dextropropoxyphene in the country.
Overdose related
deaths including suicide
Concerns have been
expressed regarding the extent of fatal self-poisoning with
dextropropoxyphene/acetaminophen combination in some countries including
England and USA. A combination of dextropropoxyphene/acetaminophen was
reported to be single drug used most frequently for suicide in England and
Wales for the period 1997-1999. It was responsible for 766 deaths over the
3-year period. Additionally, it was implicated in a fifth of all drug poisoning
suicides. Reports of concern about dextropropoxyphene poisoning have been cited
as a matter of concern from other nations including Australia, New
Zealand, Sweden, and the USA.
Death following
overdose due to this combination has been attributed to the toxic effects of
high levels of dextropropoxyphene on respiration and cardiac conduction .It has
been stated that there is a relatively narrow margin between therapeutic and
potentially lethal concentrations for this drug. Also, concerns have been
raised about possible underestimation of accidental deaths due to
dextropropoxyphene.
The United Nation's latest report on drug use
revealed a 30 per cent increase on 2009 with regards to the consumption of
narcotics with some 35 million people worldwide suffering from drug disorders,
thanks to in-depth surveys conducted in India and Nigeria.
The UN has raised
the alarm on the need for further international cooperation to deal with the health
and criminal impact of substance misuse, the Efe news reported."
"The findings
of this'year's World Drug Report fill in and further complicate the global
picture of drug challenges, underscoring the need for broader international
cooperation to advance balanced and integrated health and criminal justice
responses to supply and de"and," Yury Fedotov, Executive Director of
the UN's Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), said.
The surveys in
India in 2018 and Nigeria in 2017 have offered great insights into drug
consumption due to being such vast demographics for their region. India
accounts for 30 per cent of the population in Asia alone.
The Indian survey
was based on interviews with 5,00,000 people across the nation.
The studies have
contributed to more accurate figures of drug use globally.
The report
estimated that of the 271 million people that used any drug, 35 million (nearly
13 per cent) suffer from a drug use disorder.
Previous records
fell 4.5 million people short in their estimates and it was the surveys
conducted in both India and Nigeria that triggered the adjustment.
The death toll also
increased, with 5,85,000 people dying in 2017 from drug use.
Cannabis
consumption, the most widely used drug globally with approximately 188 million
users in 2016, has increased in Asia and North and South America, whilst a
spike in use of opioids was registered.
Opioids are the
drugs that present the largest cause for concern due to the severe impact on
the health of users.



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