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Result - Arkansas Adults Are Living Free From Addiction

Indicator - Drug overdose related mortality rate per 100,000 population, Arkansas

Current Value

19.1

2020

Definition

Line Bar

About the Data

The data source is CDC WONDER, an interactive dataset from CDC. This includes all the ICD-10 codes where the death was related to drugs: 1) accidental death (based on drug type), 2) murder by drug, and 3) intent was unknown.

In Arkansas, for accidental, it went from 11.1 (2019) to 16.1 (2020), an increase of almost 50%. We went from 388 total drug-overdose deaths in 2019 to 546 total drug overdose deaths in 2020. (There was almost no difference in the other two categories)

The data is age-adjusted and so it is comparable across years. The national data also shows a similar type of increase from 2019 to 2020. Non-opioid-related drug overdose deaths were the main contributors on a national level (i.e. Fentanyl, etc.)

The number one drug that Arkansas will overdose on is Methamphetamines. With Fentanyl, we are seeing that is poly drug-related death.

Methamphetamines were the leading cause up til 2019, but it has now been overtaken by Fentanyl.

How are we doing on the data?

When asked how Arkansas adults are doing relative to the trendline data for the indicator, the stakeholders stated the following:

  • It's getting worse over time with a very sharp spike from 2019 to 2020.
  • The data dipped in 2019. The data also dipped in 2014.

Story Behind the Curve

Stakeholders identified the following negative factors contributing to drug-related overdose deaths amongst adults in Arkansas. 

  • Perfect storm during COVID-19
    • Increased importation of Methamphetamine and Fentanyl (evidenced by a large increase in seizures at state borders)
    • Decrease in services
    • Shift in focus and efforts to address COVID-19 also meant a shift away from focusing on drug-related issues in the state
    • Increased isolation and stress might have contributed to increased use
      • More people forced to be alone while using and not able to save each other in the even of an overdose
  • Ever increasing potency of the drugs that are available mean that there is no such thing as "safe use"
    • Older strategies to mitigate overdose may not be effective
  • Poly-drug addiction and/or use will require a different type of counteracting measures
    • When we look at deaths as an outcome, we don't have anything like Narcan for Fentanyl or Methamphetamine
  • Stigma related to drug ensures that the issue is not addressed in a positive, sympathetic transparent way that promotes treatment
  • Undercounts are likely due to the illicit nature of abuse

Stakeholders identified the following positive factors restriciting drug-related overdose deaths amongst adults in Arkansas.

  • Under reporting
    • Shame connected to drug use
    • Rural communities are close-knit
  • Narcan promotion and Narcan utilization
  • First responders are trained
  • Expanding capacity in community Narcan
  • Outreaching/engaging with communities that typically shy away from first responders

Partners

Stakeholders identified the following potential partners to strengthen the positive factors or address the negative factors influencing the rate of drug-related overdose deaths amongst adults in Arkansas.

  • Families, especially those that are struggling with addiction
  • School districts
  • Public libraries
  • Businesses such as bars and nightclubs
  • Faith-based Facilities
  • City leaders
  • Drug courts
  • Food banks
  • Homeless shelters

Solutions

Stakeholders identified the following solutions to strengthen the positive factors or address the negative factors influencing the rate of drug-related overdose deaths amongst adults in Arkansas.

  • Destigmatizing substance use as a moral failure
  • Ensure everyone is released from treatment with Narcan
  • Family engagement, education, and training
  • Free or low cost Narcan to chronic opioid users
  • Mental health support 
  • Peer recovery counselors in every emergency room in the state
  • Place Narcan in community locations like where defibrillators are located
  • Rapid detection of potential clusters using surveillance practices
  • Stop and/or disrupt the supply chain to prevent the ready access to these drugs
  • Wound care/Safe Syringe programs/recovery

Strategies

Stakeholders prioritized the following strategies because they ranked highest across four criteria: Impact, Feasibility, Specificity, and Value.

  • Conduct outreach, education, training and engagement for families of substance users that help them to understand how to support their loved ones and also maintain family safety
  • Design and deliver (traditional and social media) that destigmatizes substance use as a moral failure in order to alleviate the shame associated with seeking treatment
  • Ensure everyone who participates in and is released from treatment has a supply of Narcan (targets treatment and what happens when people discharge from treatment/incarceration)

Work Plan for First Strategy

Strategy: Broaden the distribution of Narcan (Naloxone) to at risk individuals

  • Ensure everyone who participates in and is released from treatment has a supply of Narcan (targets treatment and what happens when people discharge from treatment/incarceration) 
  • Co-locate Narcan with facility first aid boxes (defibrillator boxes) 
  • Adjust the law so Narcan can be made available after hospital discharge (ED and in patient) 

Action Step

Lead

Due

Adjust the law so Narcan can be made available as broadly as possible. 

  • Hospital discharge (in patient) 

  • In buildings 

  • In public areas (schools) 

  • Crisis stabilization units 

   

Ensure everyone who participates in and is released from treatment has a supply of Narcan (targets treatment and what happens when people discharge from treatment/incarceration)

And individuals who are served by crisis stabilization units. 

DHS

 

Secure Funding to support efforts for Naloxone purchases to support the larger effort.  (Develop sustainability for long-term funding)

   

Partner with DHS to ensure availability of Narcan to state funded facilities 

   

Identify and partner with private treatment facilities 

   

Outreach to schools (Higher Ed and K-12) to include Narcan in nurse’s offices and college buildings 

   

Implement vending machine-style distribution in area where risk is high 

   

Find out regulations on emergency resources (defibrillator and fire extinguisher) in buildings to advocate for/or require including Narcan as a required element

DHA HDA

Work Plan for Second Strategy

Strategy: Conduct outreach, education, training and engagement for families of substance users that helps them to understand how to support their loved ones and also maintain family safety

Action Step

Lead

Due

     

Work Plan for Third Strategy

Strategy: Design and deliver (traditional and social media) that destigmatizes substance use as a moral failure in order to alleviate the shame associated with seeking treatment.

Action Step

Lead

Due

Get all parties to the table for a coordinated messaging campaign (ADH, DHS, AR Opioid Recovery Partnership, ACHI, CJI, AR Drug Director’s Office, UALR MidSouth, SUD Peers, Recovery Program, Department Offices of Communications)

Kirk Lane (AORP)

3/31/2023

Identify point person for each partner organization

Kirk Lane (AORP), Haley Ortiz ADH

3/31/2023

Identify plans for funding stream(s)

Jacob Smith, Kirk Lane, DHS

8/1/2023

Research what media is already being used

ADH Overdose Data to Action Program Manager (OD2A)

2/1/2023

Decide on a final messaging/media campaign

Jacob Smith (ADH)

5/31/2023

Develop plan for each partner and begin placement in free media platforms, such as Facebook, Instagram, Twitter

ADH Overdose Data to Action Program Manager (OD2A)

6/30/2023

Track Reach of Messaging/Media Campaign

Wanda Simon

12/31/2023

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