Misuse of Rx Opioids Continues to Decline

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

For the fifth consecutive year, misuse of opioid medication fell in 2020, according to a new national survey that further documents the declining role of prescription pain relievers in the U.S. drug abuse crisis.

The annual report by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) estimated that 59.3 million people used an illicit drug last year – about one in every five Americans aged 12 or older. The most commonly used illicit drug was marijuana, which was used by 49.6 million people in 2020. Prescription pain relievers were misused by 9.3 million people, most of them taking a medication that was not their own.

The National Survey on Drug Use and Health classifies “misuse” in broad terms. It means using a prescription drug in any way not directed by a doctor, including using someone else’s prescription or using a drug in greater amounts, more often, or longer than directed by a doctor. That would include someone taking an additional pill during a pain flare.

Nearly two-thirds (64.6%) of respondents who admitted misusing a pain reliever said they did it to relieve physical pain. Only 11.3% said they misused a pain medication to feel good or to get high.  

Although the rate of illicit drug use has been steadily rising in the United States for many years, the misuse of prescription pain relievers has fallen by nearly 30% since 2015, most likely a reflection of fewer prescriptions, decreased supply, and the availability of other illicit drugs. An estimated 3.3% of Americans misused a pain medication in 2020.

% MISUSE RATES FOR PRESCRIPTION PAIN RELIEVERS

SOURCE: SAMHSA

Hydrocodone was the prescription pain reliever most likely to be misused, followed by oxycodone, codeine and tramadol. Most people who misused pain medication said they did not have a prescription of their own, and obtained the drug from a friend or relative (47.2%) or bought it from a drug dealer or stranger (6.2%).  

A nationally representative sample of over 36,000 people participated in the annual SAMHSA survey. Due to the pandemic, most of the respondents participated online due to concerns about conducting interviews in person.

While anti-opioid activists have long claimed that opioid medication frequently leads to heroin use, the SAMHSA survey found there was little association between the two drugs.

“In 2020, the majority of the 9.3 million misusers of prescription pain relievers misused only prescription pain relievers in the past year (8.6 million people), but they had not used heroin. An estimated 667,000 people misused prescription pain relievers and used heroin in the past year, and 235,000 people had used heroin in the past year but had not misused prescription pain relievers,” SAMHSA reported.

A record 96,779 drug deaths were reported in the U.S. over a 12-month period ending in March 2021. The vast majority of the overdoses involved illicit fentanyl and other street drugs. Although the DEA recently issued a public safety alert warning of a surge in counterfeit pills made with illicit fentanyl, the agency has proposed further cuts in the legal supply of prescription opioids in 2022.