Understanding the differential effect of local socioeconomic conditions on the relation between prescription opioid supply and drug overdose deaths in US counties

Original research
by
Fink, David S. et al

Release Date

2023

Geography

USA

Language of Resource

English

Full Text Available

No

Open Access / OK to Reproduce

No

Peer Reviewed

Yes

Objective

We measured whether the associations of prescription opioid supply with drug overdose deaths vary by local socioeconomic conditions.

Findings/Key points

Poverty rate, income inequality, and HDI scores were found to modify the effect of prescription opioid supply on heroin overdose deaths. The plot of the interactions showed that when disadvantage is high, increasing prescription opioid supply does not increase heroin-related deaths. The less disadvantage there is, indicated by lower poverty rates, higher HDI scores, and lower income inequality, the greater the effect of increasing prescription opioid supply relative to population size on heroin-related deaths in US counties.

Design/methods

Ecological county-level study of 711,447 drug overdose deaths, including 3109 US counties between 2006-2019.

Keywords

Overdose
Mortality
Equity