The opioid epidemic has been a defining public health crisis in the US for the past quarter century. With more than 800,000 people dead from overdoses over nearly 25 years, it’s hard to find an event—outside of the Covid-19 pandemic—that has impacted the US healthcare system more. The economic cost of opioid use disorder and opioid overdoses in the US was estimated to be more than $1 trillion in 2017 alone, according to CDC data. Today, the number of overdose deaths has finally started to decline. But experts warn impending changes to Medicaid could slow that progress. Further, overdose deaths are still higher than they were pre-pandemic, Thuy Dieu Nguyen, an assistant professor of health management and policy at the University of Michigan School of Public Health, told Healthcare Brew. “We still have an ongoing opioid crisis,” she said. Where is the opioid epidemic at today?—MA |