Associated Press
November 20, 2017
WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House
says the true cost of the opioid drug epidemic in 2015 was $504 billion, or
roughly half a trillion dollars.
In an analysis to be released Monday,
the Council of Economic Advisers says the figure is more than six times larger
than the most recent estimate. The council said a 2016 private study estimated
that prescription opioid overdoes, abuse and dependence in the U.S. in 2013
cost $78.5 billion. Most of that was attributed to health care and criminal
justice spending, along with lost productivity.
The council said its estimate is
significantly larger because the epidemic has worsened, with overdose deaths
doubling in the past decade, and that some previous studies didn't reflect the
number of fatalities blamed on opioids, a powerful but addictive category of
painkillers.
The council also said previous
studies focused exclusively on prescription opioids, while its study also
factors in illicit opioids, including heroin.
"Previous estimates of the
economic cost of the opioid crisis greatly underestimate it by undervaluing the
most important component of the loss — fatalities resulting from
overdoses," said the report, which the White House released Sunday night.
Last month at the White House,
President Donald Trump declared opioid abuse a national public health
emergency. Trump announced an advertising campaign to combat what he said is
the worst drug crisis in the nation's history, but he did not direct any new
federal funding toward the effort.
Trump's declaration stopped short of
the emergency declaration that had been sought by a federal commission the
president created to study the problem. An interim report by the commission
argued for an emergency declaration, saying it would free additional money and
resources.
But in its final report earlier this
month, the panel called only for more drug courts, more training for doctors
and penalties for insurers that dodge covering addiction treatment. It did not
call for new money to address the epidemic.
More than 64,000 Americans died from
drug overdoses last year, most involving a prescription painkiller or an
illicit opioid like heroin.
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