WASHINGTON, Feb. 26 /PRNewswire/ -- There were 239 drug abuse-related
deaths in Miami and surrounding Miami-Dade County in 2001, the
federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
(SAMHSA) announced today. The data is from a new report, Mortality
Data From the Drug Abuse Warning Network, 2001 (DAWN), which tracks
deaths associated with drug abuse in a number of cities.
The data show that cocaine was mentioned in 178 of the fatalities
in Miami, and alcohol in combination with at least one other drug
in 96. There were 110 mentions of narcotic pain medications and
112 mentions of benzodiazepine anti- anxiety medications associated
with the deaths. Since many fatalities are due to multi-drug use,
there can often be more drug mentions than deaths.
"One life lost to drugs is one too many. Effective prevention
and treatment programs are key to helping reduce the needless
loss of life that results from abuse of drugs," said SAMHSA Administrator
Charles G. Curie. "We are working with states and local drug treatment
providers to build treatment capacity and to implement the most
effective treatment services available."
The 239 Miami area drug deaths seen in 2001 cap a five year rising
trend, starting with 177 drug related deaths recorded in 1997.
DAWN data cover an estimated 100 percent of the area's population,
according to SAMHSA.
The DAWN mortality data involve deaths that are drug-induced
-- one or more of the drugs directly caused the death -- or drug-related
-- drug abuse was a contributing factor in the death. DAWN counts
decedents who used the substance due to dependence, to achieve
psychic effects or to commit suicide. It does not count drug abuse
unrelated to the death, such as a past history of drug abuse but
none used at the time of death in Miami. DAWN also does not track
accidental ingestion or inhalation, or adverse reactions to medications.
Participation in DAWN is voluntary and jurisdictions that do
not provide sufficient data are not listed. DAWN counts of drug
abuse deaths therefore do not represent national data. The full
tables are available online at http://www.samhsa.gov . Click on
statistics and data.
SAMHSA, a public health agency within the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services, is the lead federal agency for improving
the quality and availability of substance abuse prevention, addiction
treatment and mental health services in the United States.