Tennessee bureaucrats not concerned about 11,500 deaths from alcohol/tobacco use/abuse ?

Overdose deaths reach ‘epidemic proportions’ in Tennessee

State: 1,263 Tennesseans died from opioid overdoses in 2014

http://www.timesfreepress.com/news/local/story/2015/sep/28/state-1263-tennesseans-died-opioid-overdoses-2014/327649/

Tennessee has 6.50 million residents out of the 320 million in the entire country… there are abt 550,000 deaths from use/abuse alcohol & tobacco.. using national percentages .. that would suggest that annually TENNESSEE would have abt 11,500 residents die from those two drugs. So the NINE TIMES DEATHS from the use/abuse of alcohol & tobacco … those lives are less important than those who died from untreated mental health issue of addictive personality ?

NASHVILLE — Statistics from the Tennessee Department of Health revealed that 1,263 Tennesseans died in 2014 from opioid overdoses despite measures designed to stop the addiction.

In 2014, the state saw 97 more deaths caused by opioid overdoses than in 2013, The Tennessean reported. According to the report, more people died from opioid overdose in 2014 than from car accidents or by gunshots.

David Reagan, the health department’s chief medical officer, said the highest frequency of overdose deaths are found in men and women ages 45 to 55.

The newspaper reports opioids are found in prescription painkillers such as Hydrocodone and Oxycodone, which are easily attainable illegally. Hydrocodone, according to the report, can cost between $5 to $7 per pill while one pill of Oxycodone ranges from $30 to $40.

Pills tile

Dr. Omar Hamada of Maury Regional Medical Center says two to three people come into the emergency room each week with an overdose that requires medical intervention.

Reagan said most people who become addicted to opioids don’t do it with the intention of becoming addicted.

“They never intended for that one incident to end up in dependency and addiction,” Reagan said. “This wasn’t their idea.”

To combat the high death rates, several legislative measures designed to stem addiction have been passed. In 2012, the state began new oversight over pain management clinics and started to expand the information tracked by its controlled substance database, the paper reports.

Starting in July, Tennessee will require chief medical officers of pain clinics to be pain specialists.

State Sen. Ken Yager, who sponsored the 2012 legislation, wants to see some funding for addiction in the state’s next budget.

“It is an epidemic of biblical proportions that we need to fight on every front,” Yager said.

 

5 Responses

  1. It’s .02%
    That is NOT an epidemic.

  2. Biblical? A bit dramatic! Once again, the numbers are skewed because not reflective of how many of these deaths were actually suicides or due to adding alcohol and/or other drugs! Still not recognizing addiction as a mental health issue; treat these people long term and not with prision!

    • So true.Typical local media sensationalism.Add the word “epidemic” and you have another bullshit local news segment.Shit like this will increase the difficulty of getting pain meds to patients.

  3. This point needs to keep being made like a broken record.

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