No one should die from overdose. These deaths are preventable. Provisional 2023 data shows a slight decrease in overdose deaths, and new reports show a decrease from June 2023-June 2024. While this is encouraging, overdose deaths still remain too high. This page focuses on official 2022 data (most reliable data). The CDC reports that there were 107,941 deaths in 2022. These are not just numbers; they are our loved ones: our families, our friends, our neighbors. Criminalization is driving the overdose crisis. Yet, many elected officials continue to fail our communities by calling for ineffective punitive policies as a response to the crisis. Elected officials must prioritize a health-based approach instead.
Oregon’s overdose death rate after drug decriminalization remains below the national average and is comparable to other western states. A recent JAMA study found no evidence that Oregon’s drug decriminalization law led to an increase in fatal overdose rates in the state. For comparison, in Washington, drug possession was decriminalized for five months in 2021. However, after recriminalizing, their overdose rates still increased. Read our fact sheet to learn more.
Overdose deaths involving prescription opioids were highest in Appalachia and in parts of the East Coast at the beginning of the overdose crisis. When access to prescriptions was restricted, demand for opioids remained and the heroin supply grew to meet increasing demand. Heroin overdose deaths then rose quickly in these states as people transitioned away from prescription opioids to heroin. Soon law enforcement began to seize large quantities of heroin to get it off the street. Since white powder heroin was commonly sold in these markets, it was easier for heroin suppliers to adulterate it with fentanyl to increase its potency. (Meanwhile, Mexican black tar heroin on the West Coast remained unadulterated, because it is not easy to mix with.) It eventually became cheaper for suppliers to source and use this fully synthetic opioid, since heroin is costly and time-consuming to make. Fentanyl was easier and more discreet to transport to meet the demand for heroin in these regions. In recent years, fentanyl moved westward, but it was often mixed into counterfeit opioid pills or sold alone as a white powder as an alternative to heroin.
What we are seeing some cities in the United States is the direct result of decades of overlapping systemic failures, the fallout of COVID-19, and the failure of local and national governments to do their jobs. Underfunding housing, social and health services including access to drug treatment is a recipe for disaster no matter where it exists. What is happening on the streets is a homelessness issue that must be met with increased access to housing and social support. In fact, unsheltered homelessness across the country has risen by 30% in the past five years. People experiencing homelessness are some of our neighbors most vulnerable to overdose, which is why we need services that can immediately connect them to care or respond in the event of an overdose emergency. This includes street outreach teams, community-based crisis response teams, and overdose prevention centers.
“I lost my son, my only child, Jeff, to an overdose. Criminalization didn’t save him. Punitive drug laws have resulted in nothing but more imprisonment, more deaths, and more devastated families. We need health-based solutions to save our loved ones.”
Denise Cullen, LCSW, Co-Founder, Broken No More
Overdose deaths are preventable. Any overdose death is a policy failure. Given the magnitude of the crisis, our elected officials must prioritize health-based policies that can prevent overdose deaths and save lives.
The Drug Policy Alliance is working to pass federal and state legislation that would remove barriers to effective interventions, monitor overdose trends, support research, and allocate much-needed funding to support life-saving overdose prevention programs.
Learn more about the solutions: