Release Date
Geography
Language of Resource
Full Text Available
Open Access / OK to Reproduce
Peer Reviewed
Objective
This study examined racial/ethnic and educational disparities in US synthetic opioid overdose mortality East and West of the Mississippi River.
Findings/Key points
Racial/ethnic disparities in synthetic opioid mortality rates, relative to the Non-Hispanic (NH) White population, were observed in the NH Black and NH American Indian/Alaska Native populations in the West, and the Puerto Rican and NH American Indian/Alaska Native populations in the East. Relative to those with a Bachelor’s degree or higher: in the West, the synthetic opioid mortality rate was more than seven times as high for those with a high school diploma only, and in the East, approximately thirteen times as high for those with a high school diploma only or less than a high school diploma.
Design/methods
Mortality data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and population estimates from the American Community Survey