Opioids 2017: 70% Increase in Midwest Emergency Room Visits, 115 People Died a Day

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
March 7, 2018

WHOOPS!

We are a heroin nation.

Why?

Is this what we wanted?

Fox News:

Emergency visits for suspected opioid overdoses shot up 30 percent from the third quarter of 2016 to third quarter 2017, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

During a briefing of the latest Vital Signs report, CDC’s Acting Director Dr. Anne Schuchat said overall the most dramatic increases were in the Midwest, where emergency visits went up 70 percent in all ages over 25. 

ER visits for opioid-related emergencies more than doubled in two states. Wisconsin saw the biggest increase, 109 percent, and Delaware saw a 105 percent increase. In Pennsylvania, ER visits were up 81 percent.

“We’re seeing the highest ever death rates in the U.S.,” Schuchat  said. She pointed to national statistics that out of 63,000 overdose deaths in 2016, 42,000 of them involved opioids.

“[This] means 115 people die each day from opioid overdose,” she said.

There were some decreases reported in the East, with the largest being a 15 percent reduction in Kentucky, which could reflect fluctuation in drug supplies or interventions.

Yeah, more likely it’s just that so many people are dead already.

However, hospital visits in cities of all types increased steadily in each quarter by 51 percent. Dr. Schuchat emphasized, “Bottom line — no area of the U.S. is exempt from this epidemic.”

U.S. Surgeon General James Adams was also present during the briefing, and mentioned how he witnessed first-hand his own young brother’s struggle with opioid addiction.

“Science is clear: Addiction is a chronic disease and not a moral failing,” the doctor said.

I don’t think that’s true by the way. And even if it was, it wouldn’t be a useful narrative.

People should be held personally responsible for their personal decisions, telling them they have a “decisions disease” is not helpful.

HOWEVER: addiction, when it is a social trend, it is a societal failing.

This is some primitive shit.

Who in the 1990s would have thought in the 2010s people would be shooting heroin like it’s the 1920s?