|
Press Release
365 Drug Abuse Deaths in Dallas 2001
Wednesday February 26, 7:06
am ET
WASHINGTON, Feb. 26 /PRNewswire/ -- There were 365 drug
abuse-related deaths in Dallas and five surrounding counties
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 shows that cocaine was mentioned in 185 of the
fatalities, while alcohol-in-combination with at least one
other drug was noted in 138. There were 115 mentions of
narcotic pain medications associated with the deaths. Since
many fatalities are due to multi-drug use, there can often
be more drug mentions than deaths. Data from Dallas County
and the counties of Collin, Denton, Ellis, and Kaufman were
also included.
"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."
Drug abuse deaths in Dallas increased from 320 in 2000
to 365 in 2001, but were still below the 379 reached in
1997. DAWN data represents the deaths related to drug abuse
in 94 percent of the area's population.
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. 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.
Source: Substance
Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
|