Prescription opioid abuse poses deadly threat
WASHINGTON – DEA Acting Administrator Robert Patterson today
announced results of the 2017 National Drug Threat Assessment (NDTA), which
outlines the threats posed to the United States by domestic and international
drug trafficking and the abuse of illicit drugs.
“This report underscores the scope and magnitude of the
ongoing opioid crisis in the United States,” said Acting Administrator
Patterson. “The information in the report represents data gathered over the
past year, but of critical importance is the real time information we get every
day from our partners. It has never been a more important time to use all the
tools at our disposal to fight this epidemic, and we must remain steadfast in
our mission to combat all dangerous drugs of abuse.”
Over the past 10 years, the drug landscape in the United
States has shifted, with the opioid threat – including controlled prescription
drugs (CPDs), fentanyl and other synthetic opioids, and heroin – reaching
epidemic levels and impacting significant portions of the United States. While
the current opioid crisis has received significant attention, other drugs of
abuse remain prevalent. These include methamphetamine, cocaine, new
psychoactive substances (NPS), and marijuana. In addition, drug poisoning
deaths are the leading cause of injury death in the United States; they are
currently at their highest ever recorded level and, every year since 2011, have
outnumbered deaths by firearms, motor vehicle crashes, suicide, and homicide.
2017 NDTA findings of note:
• CPDs have
been linked to the largest number of overdose deaths of any illicit drug class
since 2001. Although abuse has lessened in some areas, CPDs are still used by
more people than cocaine, heroin, MDMA, methamphetamine, and PCP combined.
• Heroin
poses a serious public health and safety threat to the United States. Overdose
deaths, already at high levels, continue to rise. The increased mixing of
heroin with analogues of the highly-potent synthetic opioid fentanyl and other
synthetic opioids has exacerbated this situation.
• Fentanyl is
increasingly mixed with diluents and sold as heroin, often with no heroin
present in the product. Fentanyl also continues to be made more widely
available in the form of counterfeit prescription pills marketed for illicit
street sales.
• The
methamphetamine threat has remained prevalent. Inbound seizures of
methamphetamine from Mexico have increased every year since 2010, but domestic
production has declined.
• The cocaine
threat continues to rebound. Cocaine availability and use have increased
significantly, partially due to record increases in coca cultivation and
cocaine production in Colombia, the primary source for the cocaine market in
the United States.
• NPS,
manmade products that mimic the effects of controlled substances, continue to
be a challenge. The NPS most commonly abused in the United States include
synthetic cannabinoids and cathinones, which are available from China and
packaged into a variety of forms domestically. Traffickers continue to modify
NPS’ chemical formulas to create new substances to circumvent regulations and
expand their market.
• Marijuana
production in the United States has increased and the national discussion
surrounding marijuana enforcement efforts continues to evolve. User demand for
concentrated forms of marijuana has continued.
• Mexican
cartels remain the greatest criminal drug threat in the United States. The
cartels are the principal wholesale drug sources for domestic gangs responsible
for street-level distribution. The Sinaloa Cartel maintains the most expansive
footprint in the United States while the Jalisco New Generation Cartel has
increased its presence across the United States.
The National Drug Threat Assessment provides a yearly
assessment of the many challenges local communities face related to drug abuse
and drug trafficking. Highlights in the report include usage and trafficking
trends for drugs such as prescription drugs, heroin, methamphetamine, cocaine,
marijuana, and the hundreds of synthetic drugs.
The assessment factors in information from many data sources
such as drug seizures, drug purity, laboratory analyses, information on the
involvement of organized criminal groups, and survey data provided to DEA by
5,155 state and local law enforcement agencies across the country.
The National Drug Threat Assessment can be accessed at
https://www.dea.gov/docs/DIR-040-17_2017-NDTA.pdf.
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