Overdose awareness campaigns are vital in every community

Michael Leach
Posted 8/15/24

International Overdose Awareness Day, Aug. 31, is the most extensive annual campaign to end overdose. The campaign raises awareness of overdose, which has impacted every community. Too many families have lost loved ones, but this campaign and others like it can save lives.

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Overdose awareness campaigns are vital in every community

Posted

International Overdose Awareness Day, Aug. 31, is the most extensive annual campaign to end overdose. The campaign raises awareness of overdose, which has impacted every community. Too many families have lost loved ones, but this campaign and others like it can save lives.

According to the Illinois Department of Public Health, there were 3,261 opioid overdose deaths in 2022, an 8.2% increase from 2021. Approximately 83% of those deaths involved opioids. Since 2013, synthetic opioid overdose deaths increased by 3,341%. 

Nationally, according to the CDC, there were an estimated 107,543 drug overdose deaths in the United States during 2023 — fortunately, a decrease of 3% from 2022. This has been the first national annual decrease since 2018. However, synthetic opioids continue to be involved in three-quarters of all overdose deaths across the nation. 

Overdose prevention campaigns work tirelessly to prevent these deaths among people of all ages. There are practical resources, tools, and information that individuals, families, and communities can use to increase awareness, prevent overdose, and save lives.

Some of Illinois’s overdose prevention resources include the Drug Overdose Prevention Program operated by the Illinois Department of Human Services. The Illinois Saves Overdose website offers information about Naloxone and the Illinois Helpline 1-833-234-6343 or text “HELP” to 833234.

One of the most recognized national awareness and prevention resources is the International Overdose Awareness Day website, which provides extensive resources and ways to get involved. The National Harm Reduction Coalition offers evidence-based strategies that reduce the risk of overdose. Finally, the National Safety Council provides resources for the workplace.

It’s important to remember that overdose is preventable. Any one individual or local community can increase awareness through practical approaches and effective campaigns. Begin by keeping in mind that stigma or the fear of stigma stops someone struggling with addiction from sharing their problems with friends or family. Stigma, for example, can come from individuals, family members, clinicians, or the community. Begin by removing the stigma.

Moreover, you should become familiar with the facts about fentanyl and fentanyl analogs. Fentanyl is 50 times more potent than heroin and 100 times more potent than morphine. Fentanyl is commonly mixed into fake prescription drugs and illicit street drugs.

Most overdose deaths occur because of polysubstance use, which occurs when two or more drugs are taken together, whether intentionally or unintentionally. The primary risk factors associated with overdose include mixing drugs, tolerance, quality of the drug, using alone, age and physical health, mode of administration, and previous non-fatal overdoses.

Also, familiarize yourself with life-saving Naloxone. In Illinois, pharmacies and healthcare professionals can dispense it to anyone who requests it.

Most importantly, remember those we have lost to overdose and acknowledge the grief of the family left behind. Overdose affects everyone, and this should also fuel our commitment to end overdose and all of its related harms.

International Overdose Awareness Day 2024 focuses on how every individual action matters and how coming together as a community creates a decisive collective action. Overdose awareness is for everyone, for people who use drugs and those who don’t, for families who have lost loved ones, for healthcare workers, advocates, and activists. These are necessary steps everyone can take to save lives, protect communities, and safeguard families.

Michael Leach has spent most of his career as a healthcare professional specializing in substance use & addiction recovery. He is a Certified Clinical Medical Assistant (CCMA) and the Public Relations Officer at DRS.