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- Written by: Ty Schepis, Texas State University
Drug overdose deaths in the United States continue to rise.
Overdoses claimed more than 112,000 American lives from May 2022 to May 2023, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a 37% increase compared with the 12-month period ending in May 2020.
The vast majority of those who died were adults. But drug overdoses are killing young Americans in unprecedented numbers: The monthly total rose from 31 in July 2019 to 87 in May 2021, the period with the most recent data.
As a scholar of substance use who focuses on patterns that vary between age groups, I’m struck by how adolescents’ overdose deaths differ from adults’ in terms of gender, race and ethnicity and the drugs causing these fatalities.
These differences mean that the groups considered to be at high risk and the strategies needed to prevent overdoses in adolescents should not be the same as for adults.
Who is dying?
When the CDC examined data for Americans 10 to 19 years old, it found that, as is the case for adults, most adolescents dying from drug overdoes are male. However, the share of girls among these fatalities is larger than the share of women.
More than twice as many boys who are tweens or teens are dying of a drug overdose for every girl in that age group.
Among adults, three men die of a drug overdose for every two women.
The share of fatal overdoses of white, non-Hispanic adolescents is vastly greater than for their nonwhite peers – more so than for adults.
Fentanyl’s often to blame
Another difference is what’s causing these fatal overdoses.
Among adults, those who use more than one drug are more likely to die from an overdose than those who use a single drug. The most common combinations are fentanyl with another opioid, like a prescription medication, and fentanyl with a stimulant, like cocaine or methamphetamine.
Fentanyl on its own is the key culprit in adolescent overdoses. For teens, 84% of fatal overdoses involved fentanyl, and 56% of all overdoses involved only fentanyl.
This is consistent with my team’s research indicating that rates of prescription opioid misuse fell from 2015 to 2019 in both adolescents and young adults. It also squares with other data that shows deaths from heroin-involved overdoses have declined in recent years.
Fentanyl is among the most potent opioids available. It’s estimated to be roughly 100 times more potent than morphine – a very strong opioid typically used in hospital settings. Teens and tweens usually have little tolerance to opioids because they often have not been exposed to them before, and fentanyl’s high potency makes them more likely to overdose.
Many adolescents accidentally take fentanyl when they ingest counterfeit pills that they believe are prescription opioids or stimulants, or other illicit drugs that are laced with the drug.
This unintentional use can make an overdose even more likely, because people who are unaware they are taking fentanyl are less likely to have the overdose-reversal medication naloxone or fentanyl test strips on hand.
In 67% of adolescent overdose deaths, a bystander was present who could have intervened. Naloxone was administered in less than half of cases where a bystander was present.
Little to no prior drug history
Only 1 in 10 teens and tweens who died from a drug overdose had a history of treatment for a substance use problem, and only 1 in 7 had ever experienced a prior nonfatal overdose. Adolescents who fatally overdose do not necessarily show the warning signs generally expected beforehand, such as problems with alcohol or other drugs or prior substance use treatment.
This pattern underscores the importance that all parents proactively talk with their children about substance use by the time they are 12 years old.
Parents who express their disapproval of substance use tend to prevent or delay it in their kids. Having children who never use substances may be an unnecessary and unrealistic goal – after all, most adults drink alcohol at least occasionally.
However, parents can emphasize that their child’s brain is changing rapidly and significantly and that not using drugs or alcohol while young helps promote healthy development.
What parents can do
Having naloxone available can also be important. It prevents fentanyl and other opioids from causing an overdose by blocking access to opioid receptors in the brain. This potentially lifesaving drug is easy to use, but the cost of the over-the-counter version, which can exceed $50 for two doses, makes it out of reach for some of the people who need it most.
Think of naloxone like car insurance: You don’t want to use it, but it’s important to have in case something goes wrong.
Even if your child never tries an illicit drug, they may be able to intervene and save a friend who overdoses. Everyone should know the signs of an opioid overdose – they include shallow or no breathing, problems staying conscious, and cold, clammy skin – and be ready to intervene when they see someone of any age who appears to be experiencing one.
Finally, more than 4 in 10 adolescents who died from an overdose had a history of mental health conditions. That’s consistent with research from my colleagues and me linking poorer mental health and opioid misuse in adolescents.
There’s also a strong link between mental health conditions and drug overdoses among adults.
For this reason and many others, such as the rising rates of adolescent depression, I recommend that all adults – whether caregivers or other people in an adolescent’s life – check in on their mental health regularly and recommend or seek treatment for any concerns as early as possible.![]()
Ty Schepis, Professor of Psychology, Texas State University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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- Written by: Elizabeth Larson
The special board meeting and board retreat will begin at 10 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 30, at Yuba College, 2088 N. Beale Road, Building 300-Flavors, Marysville.
Members of the public may attend the meeting virtually.
The meeting Zoom link is https://yccd-edu.zoom.us/j/81873478535. The call-in number is 1 669 900 6833; the Zoom meeting ID is 818 7347 8535.
After the lunch break, the board will have a follow-up discussion on Woodland Community College and its Lake County Campus, which was the focus of a great deal of public comment at the board’s Nov. 9 meeting in Clearlake.
Community members — including former and current students and educators — told the board that they believe Woodland College’s leadership has been purposefully starving the Lake County Campus of the resources needed to survive.
Also on Thursday, the board will conduct its 2022-23 self evaluation before holding a performance evaluation of Chancellor Dr. Shouan Pan.
Email Elizabeth Larson at
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- Written by: Lake County News reports
Much of the equipment has been recovered and one arrest has been made, the agency said.
On Nov. 19, deputies responded to Lower Lake High School regarding a possible burglary of items from school vehicles, said sheriff’s public information officer Lauren Berlinn.
Berlinn said Deputy Chase Reynolds spoke with a school maintenance worker who said he arrived at the school at around 7:30 a.m. and saw the chain locking the gate surrounding the maintenance yard had been cut, five maintenance vehicles were tampered with, and several power tools and fuel were stolen.
The estimated total loss of tools was valued at over $8,000, Berlinn said.
The maintenance worker reviewed surveillance camera footage from the weekend and saw two males enter the maintenance yard at midnight on Nov. 19, siphon gasoline out of the school maintenance vehicles and remove tools from the vehicles. Berlinn said the suspects returned two hours later and stole additional tools from the vehicles.
The surveillance footage caught the suspects leaving the school in a green Honda Civic with distinct features, according to Berlinn’s report.
Deputies searched the Clearlake area and, with the assistance of Clearlake Police Department Officers, located the vehicle in Clearlake, Berlinn said.
Deputies contacted the driver and determined they were on searchable probation out of Lake County. Berlinn said the driver was suspected of being one of the suspects by Deputy Reynolds, as they were wearing similar clothing as seen in the surveillance video.
Per the driver’s probation status, Deputy Reynolds searched the vehicle. Deputy Reynolds located and recovered several of the stolen tools and items used to siphon fuel, Berlinn said.
Deputy Reynolds arrested the driver, identified as Johnny Richard Caldwell, 23, and drove him to his residence in Clearlake to conduct a further probation search, which resulted in the recovery of approximately $8,700 worth of power tools, hand tools, power tool accessories, and school laptops, according to Berlinn.
Berlinn said the items recovered were positively identified as belonging to the school as they were all engraved with unique identifying information. Lower Lake High School officials confirmed the recovered items were those stolen from the school.
This investigation is ongoing. Anyone with information should contact Deputy Reynolds via email at
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- Written by: Lake County News reports
In compliance with Assembly Bill 481 (2021 Chiu), the department has scheduled a community engagement meeting at 1:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 28, in the council chambers at Lakeport City Hall, 225 Park St.
The meeting, open to any member of the public, will be for the purpose of discussion, including a question-and-answer session, regarding its annual military equipment report.
For more information, contact the Lakeport Police Department at 707-263-5491.
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