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Methamphetamine Deaths Soar, Hitting Black And Native Americans Especially Hard

FILE - This Jan. 23, 2020, file photo released by the Tulare County Sheriff's Office shows evidence seized after a Jan. 5 traffic stop led officers to major methamphetamine and fentanyl trafficking operation, including labs inside three homes in Pixley, Calif., and drugs with a street value of $1.5 million, authorities said. A record 621 people died of drug overdoses in San Francisco so far in 2020, a staggering number that far outpaces the 173 deaths from COVID-19 the city has seen thus far. (Tulare County Sheriff's Office via AP, File)
Evidence seized from a drug trafficking operation in central California in early 2020 included methamphetamine and fentanyl with a street value of $1.5 million, authorities said.

When Winnie White Tail convened a new session of in-patient substance use treatment last month for members of the Arapaho and Cheyenne tribes, she found roughly half her clients struggling with methamphetamine addiction."It's readily available, it's easy to get," White Tail says. She's a Cheyenne tribal member herself and runs the George Hawkins Memorial Treatment Centerin Clinton, Okla."I believe it's deeply entrenched across the community — not just in Native communities," she tells NPR.A study published Wednesday in the journal JAMA Psychiatry suggests methamphetamine use is surging as a major cause of high-risk addiction and overdose death in the U.S.From 2015 to 2019, the number of deaths linked to methamphetamine use rose from 5,526 a year to 15,489 a year — roughly a 180% increase.The researchers found Native Americans and Alaska Natives still have the highest rate of methamphetamine use disorder and have seen sharp increases in drug deaths in recent years."In terms of absolute numbers, the group that's most negatively affected by methamphetamines are American Indians and Alaska Natives and the difference is gigantic," says Dr. Nora Volkow, head of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, who co-authored the study.

How fentanyl makes meth's devastation even worse

Methamphetamines are increasingly deadly because much of the supply of the stimulant sold on the street is contaminated with the potent synthetic opioid fentanyl.Volkov says use of the drug has also spread rapidly into communities where it was once considered rare. Black Americans saw a tenfold increase in methamphetamine use over the same five-year period.Dr. Stephen Taylor, a psychiatrist and Fellow with the American Society of Addiction Medicine., says the nation's focus on the opioid crisis — with its devastating impact on white, rural communities — distracted attention and resources away from the deadly spread of methamphetamines in communities of color."Those communities have been confronting a massive increase in addictions to and overdose deaths from methamphetamine for a long time," Taylor says, noting that this study adds new detail of the magnitude of the increase.The data also suggest a surge in high-risk behaviors linked to methamphetamines across all demographics, including among women.Researchers found a higher frequency of use, an increased use of needles to inject the drug, and a higher incidence of combining methamphetamines with other drugs, such as the powerful synthetic opioid fentanyl.Another worrisome trend, the scientists note, is the rapid transition of casual and recreational methamphetamine use into full-blown addiction for many people. "That, of course, puts you at much higher risk of dangerous practices," Volkow says.

It's not just a pre-pandemic trend

All the data included in this study was collected before the pandemic.But Volkov notes that preliminary information collected by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 2020 points to another more recent spike in methamphetamine-related overdose deaths."So this is huge and it's basically almost the equivalent to the increase of overdose deaths we're seeing for fentanyl and other synthetic opioids," she says.According to the latest estimates from the CDC, roughly 96,000 Americans died from drug overdoses over the most recent 12-month period where data is available.Roughly 15% to 20% of those fatalities appear to involve methamphetamines, often contaminated with fentanyl.As NPR has reported, efforts to target cartels that are producing fentanyl and methamphetamines inside Mexico (which are later smuggled into the U.S.) have largely unraveled.Researchers say the findings published Wednesday point to an urgent need for more research into methamphetamine treatment and more funding for high-quality programs to help people with methamphetamine use disorder."What makes these data even more devastating is that currently there are no approved medications to treat methamphetamine use disorder," Emily Einstein, a neuroscientist with NIDA and co-author of the study, notes in a written statement.Last week, the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy urged Congress to approve $10.7 billion in funding for drug treatment. "I grieve with the families who have lost loved ones to the overdose epidemic," said Regina LaBelle, ONDCP's acting director, in a written statement.Volkow, the head of NIDA, says it's important that more treatment approaches be shaped to build on cultural strengths and local resources, especially in American Indian and Alaska Native communities."We do have behavioral interventions that have been shown to be effective," Volkow says. "The ability to provide that support and tailor it to their own cultural needs — that could be beneficial.""I'm hopeful every day," says Winnie White Tail, who runs the in-patient drug program in Oklahoma. "I think the younger we can reach our young people, we can begin to turn this corner."White Tail says her program focuses in part on restoring cultural and spiritual values, which she believes can help more people in her community avoid relapse."We do have to have a strong sense of cultural self esteem," White Tail says. "A lot of our issues are around low self-esteem, poverty and depression." Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.