PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Nonfatal opioid overdoses before and after Covid-19: Regional variation in rates of change

  • Albert J. Burgess-Hull,
  • Kirsten E. Smith,
  • Leigh V. Panlilio,
  • Destiny Schriefer,
  • Kenzie L. Preston,
  • Aliese Alter,
  • Christopher Yeager,
  • Timothy Chizmar,
  • Ted Delbridge,
  • Kenan Zamore,
  • Jeff Beeson,
  • David H. Epstein

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 3

Abstract

Read online

Background The Covid-19 pandemic and its accompanying public-health orders (PHOs) have led to (potentially countervailing) changes in various risk factors for overdose. To assess whether the net effects of these factors varied geographically, we examined regional variation in the impact of the PHOs on counts of nonfatal overdoses, which have received less attention than fatal overdoses, despite their public health significance. Methods Data were collected from the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), which recorded suspected overdoses between July 1, 2018 and October 25, 2020. We used segmented regression models to assess the impact of PHOs on nonfatal-overdose trends in Washington DC and the five geographical regions of Maryland, using a historical control time series to adjust for normative changes in overdoses that occurred around mid-March (when the PHOs were issued). Results The mean level change in nonfatal opioid overdoses immediately after mid-March was not reliably different in the Covid-19 year versus the preceding control time series for any region. However, the rate of increase in nonfatal overdose was steeper after mid-March in the Covid-19 year versus the preceding year for Maryland as a whole (B = 2.36; 95% CI, 0.65 to 4.06; p = .007) and for certain subregions. No differences were observed for Washington DC. Conclusions The pandemic and its accompanying PHOs were associated with steeper increases in nonfatal opioid overdoses in most but not all of the regions we assessed, with a net effect that was deleterious for the Maryland region as a whole.