| Literature DB >> 30091966 |
Rebecca E Cash, Jeremiah Kinsman, Remle P Crowe, Madison K Rivard, Mark Faul, Ashish R Panchal.
Abstract
As the opioid epidemic in the United States has continued since the early 2000s (1,2), most descriptions have focused on misuse and deaths. Increased cooperation with state and local partners has enabled more rapid and comprehensive surveillance of nonfatal opioid overdoses (3).* Naloxone administrations obtained from emergency medical services (EMS) patient care records have served as a useful proxy for overdose surveillance in individual communities and might be a previously unused data source to describe the opioid epidemic, including fatal and nonfatal events, on a national level (4-6). Using data from the National Emergency Medical Services Information System (NEMSIS),† the trend in rate of EMS naloxone administration events from 2012 to 2016 was compared with opioid overdose mortality rates from National Vital Statistics System multiple cause-of-death mortality files. During 2012-2016, the rate of EMS naloxone administration events increased 75.1%, from 573.6 to 1004.4 administrations per 100,000 EMS events, mirroring the 79.7% increase in opioid overdose mortality from 7.4 deaths per 100,000 persons to 13.3. A bimodal age distribution of patients receiving naloxone from EMS parallels a similar age distribution of deaths, with persons aged 25-34 years and 45-54 years most affected. However, an accurate estimate of the complete injury burden of the opioid epidemic requires assessing nonfatal overdoses in addition to deaths. Evaluating and monitoring nonfatal overdose events via the novel approach of using EMS data might assist in the development of timely interventions to address the evolving opioid crisis.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30091966 PMCID: PMC6089336 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm6731a2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
Patient demographics for emergency medical services (EMS) event records with documented administration of naloxone — United States, 2012– 2016
| Characteristic | Year, no. (%) | P–value* | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2012 (N = 91,853) | 2013 (N = 108,957) | 2014 (N = 123,400) | 2015 (N = 167,182) | 2016 (N = 207,584) | ||
|
| 36,933 (40.2) | 45,002 (41.3) | 53,601 (43.4) | 79,611 (47.6) | 104,412 (50.3) | <0.001 |
|
| ||||||
| 0–14 | 628 (0.7) | 605 (0.6) | 718 (0.6) | 859 (0.5) | 1,080 (0.5) | <0.001 |
| 15–24 | 11,715 (12.8) | 13,159 (12.1) | 14,350 (11.7) | 19,759 (11.9) | 23,135 (11.2) | |
| 25–34 | 15,686 (17.2) | 18,955 (17.5) | 22,947 (18.7) | 35,179 (21.2) | 47,411 (23.0) | |
| 35–44 | 13,910 (15.2) | 16,190 (14.9) | 18,325 (14.9) | 25,929 (15.6) | 33,979 (16.5) | |
| 45–54 | 18,049 (19.8) | 20,815 (19.2) | 22,812 (18.6) | 29,491 (17.7) | 36,333 (17.6) | |
| 55–64 | 14,014 (15.3) | 17,557 (16.2) | 19,930 (16.2) | 26,366 (15.9) | 32,439 (15.7) | |
| 65–74 | 7,808 (8.5) | 9,856 (9.1) | 11,380 (9.3) | 14,271 (8.6) | 16,431 (8.0) | |
| ≥75 | 9,575 (10.5) | 11,341 (10.5) | 12,344 (10.1) | 14,463 (8.7) | 15,684 (7.6) | |
|
| 49,343 (54.0) | 59,492 (54.9) | 69,564 (56.7) | 97,542 (58.6) | 126,600 (61.3) | <0.001 |
|
| ||||||
| White | 57,438 (78.0) | 65,786 (76.2) | 73,257 (75.6) | 96,625 (75.0) | 112,277 (72.0) | <0.001 |
| Black | 11,062 (15.0) | 14,639 (17.0) | 17,018 (17.6) | 23,660 (18.4) | 33,338 (21.4) | |
| Other§ | 5,182 (7.0) | 5,871 (6.8) | 6,680 (6.9) | 8,618 (6.7) | 10,370 (6.7) | |
Source: National Emergency Medical Services Information System (https://nemsis.org/), 2012–2016.
* Nonparametric test of trend.
† EMS records were included if any of the following were documented as drug ingestion, poisoning, or overdose: complaint reported by dispatch (E03_01, field value 510), EMS provider’s primary impression (E09_15, field value 1690), EMS provider’s secondary impression (E09_16, field value 1825), and cause of injury (E10_01, field value 9530).
§ American Indian or Alaska native, Asian, Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, other/unknown.
Rates of emergency medical services (EMS) naloxone administration events and opioid overdose deaths — National EMS Information System (NEMSIS) and CDC National Vital Statistics System, United States, 2012–2016*
| Year | NEMSIS† EMS naloxone administration events
rate (95% CI) | CDC¶ opioid-involved death rate (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | Suspected opioid§ | ||
| 2012 | 573.6 (569.9–577.3) | 230.6 (228.3–233.0) | 7.4 (7.3–7.5) |
| 2013 | 666.0 (662.0–669.9) | 275.1 (272.5–277.6) | 7.9 (7.8–8.0) |
| 2014 | 691.3 (687.4–695.1) | 300.3 (297.7–302.8) | 9.0 (8.9–9.1) |
| 2015 | 805.1 (801.3–809.0) | 383.4 (380.7–386.1) | 10.4 (10.3–10.5) |
| 2016 | 1,004.4 (1,000.1–1,008.7) | 505.2 (502.1–508.3) | 13.3 (13.2–13.4) |
|
| 75.1 | 119.0 | 79.7 |
Abbreviation: CI = confidence interval.
* Naloxone administration event rate expressed as rate per 100,000 EMS events; age-adjusted mortality rate expressed per 100,000 persons.
† Per 100,000 EMS events. Data from NEMSIS (https://nemsis.org/), 2012–2016.
§ EMS records were included if any of the following were documented as drug ingestion, poisoning, or overdose: complaint reported by dispatch (E03_01, field value 510), EMS provider’s primary impression (E09_15, field value 1690), EMS provider’s secondary impression (E09_16, field value 1825), and cause of injury (E10_01, field value 9530).
¶ Per 100,000 population. Data from CDC’s National Vital Statistics System, Multiple Cause of Death Data, 2012–2016; CDC WONDER (https://wonder.cdc.gov). To obtain estimates of opioid-involved deaths from the Multiple Cause of Death Data see https://wonder.cdc.gov; International Classification of Disease, Tenth Revision (ICD-10) codes X40–X44, X60–X64, X85, and Y10–Y14 were used for underlying cause of death and ICD-10 codes T40.0, T40.1, T40.2, T40.3, T40.4, and T40.6 were used for multiple cause of death.
** Percent change calculated from 2012 to 2016.
FIGUREPercentage of naloxone administrations by emergency medical services and percentage of opioid-related deaths, by age — United States, 2012 and 2016