Drug overdose deaths plummet in the US amid less potent fentanyl

Fentanyl-related overdose deaths in the US dropped by 34 percent from 2023 to 2024, falling from nearly 73,000 to under 48,000. This decline, observed across demographics and regions, appears linked to reduced purity in illegal fentanyl supplies. While marking progress in the opioid crisis, experts caution that other drug deaths are rising and the trend may not last.

The US has faced a severe drug overdose crisis since 1999, with more than 1 million deaths recorded. After steady increases, total overdose deaths fell by about 3 percent in 2023 and then by 26 percent in 2024. Researchers Joseph Friedman at the University of California, San Diego, and Chelsea Shover at the University of California, Los Angeles, analyzed data from the National Vital Statistics System and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s WONDER database to identify drivers of this shift.

Fentanyl deaths declined sharply, while those from stimulants like cocaine and methamphetamine without fentanyl rose by over 4 percent, from around 18,000 to nearly 19,000. The drop occurred uniformly across races, sexes, regions, and most age groups. Shover noted, “If it was about increasing broad access to harm reduction and treatment services, you might be expected to see more of an effect on other drugs.” She added, “But since we saw it across the board, that makes me think it is something in the drugs themselves.”

Supporting evidence comes from Daniel Busch at Northwestern University, who found declines in deaths involving fentanyl combined with other drugs, such as a 35 percent drop in cocaine-fentanyl cases. The US Drug Enforcement Agency reported fentanyl purity in seized powder peaking at 25 percent by weight in mid-2023 before falling to 11 percent by late 2024, possibly due to China’s crackdown on precursor production starting in November 2023. However, Shover questioned the timing: “I think the timing of when restrictions happened, and enforcement of such restrictions, doesn’t line up very cleanly [with falling overdose deaths].”

Friedman described the opioid epidemic as having four waves—prescription opioids, heroin, fentanyl, and fentanyl-stimulant combinations—all now declining. Yet, preliminary data suggests the fentanyl drop may be leveling off. Deaths from cocaine, methamphetamine, xylazine, and the veterinary sedative medetomidine are increasing. Sam Stern at Temple University Hospital reported routine intensive care admissions for medetomidine withdrawal in 2024, a new development since its detection in 2022.

Despite the progress, overdose deaths still totaled nearly 80,000 in 2024. Busch emphasized, “The fact it is coming down doesn’t mean that we’ve solved the crisis. We are still losing so many people.” Friedman warned, “We can’t just celebrate this [fentanyl] victory. We still need to pay attention to the way things are shifting.” Shover added, “We do not yet have good evidence that the changes in the supply we saw in 2023 and 2024 are durable.”

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Realistic illustration of Colombia's booming coca fields, cocaine trafficking routes to the US, and rising overdose deaths amid record global supply.
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Global cocaine supply hits record levels as Colombia’s coca boom reverberates abroad

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Cocaine production and trafficking have reached record highs in recent years, propelled largely by renewed growth in coca cultivation and cocaine output in Colombia, according to U.N. estimates. Researchers and U.S. health data indicate the surge has coincided with larger cocaine shipments, expanding use in some markets, and a marked rise in cocaine-involved overdose deaths in the United States.

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Puebla's state prosecutor's office reported that a girl hospitalized for food poisoning in Huauchinango tested positive for fentanyl due to medications given at the hospital. President Claudia Sheinbaum ordered an investigation into whether the substance was in the tamales eaten by the children. Authorities are analyzing food samples while one girl remains under observation.

A Utah jury convicted Kouri Richins of aggravated murder and other charges on March 17, 2026, after three hours of deliberation in a three-week trial, finding she poisoned her husband Eric with a fentanyl-laced cocktail in March 2022. The 35-year-old mother faces 25 years to life; sentencing is set for May 13.

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São Paulo's Public Security Secretariat released 2025 data showing 834 deaths by police, with the fourth quarter recording 276 victims, the highest since 2015. While homicides fell 4% statewide to 2,527, the capital saw a 6% rise to 530 cases. Experts criticize the rising lethality trend under Governor Tarcísio de Freitas's administration.

The Subsecretaría de Prevención del Delito announced on Monday the start of preliminary weekly reports on homicide victims. The first report showed 97 victims from President José Antonio Kast's inauguration to April 12, a 2.1% increase from 2025. Annually, figures indicate a 12.8% decrease.

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Police in Independence, Missouri, discovered fentanyl inside Barbie doll packages sold at a local discount store. All five contaminated packages have been recovered, with no injuries reported. The investigation continues.

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