Opioid Prescriptions Drop for First Time in Two Decades

Several health data companies report a 12 to 18 percent drop in prescriptions since 2012

MONDAY, May 23, 2016 (HealthDay News) -- In a sign that the opioid epidemic might be waning, new data show that the number of opioid prescriptions has dropped for the first time in 20 years.

Ever since Oxycontin was first brought to the market in 1996, prescriptions have increased significantly. But, in 2013, 2014, and 2015, fewer patients were prescribed these medications, The New York Times found in an analysis of several sources of data. The trend suggests that doctors might finally be responding to repeated government efforts to curb use of the drugs, experts told the Times. "The culture is changing," Bruce Psaty, M.D., Ph.D., M.P.H., a researcher at the University of Washington in Seattle who studies drug safety, told the newspaper. "We are on the downside of a curve with opioid prescribing now."

IMS Health, which gathers prescribing information for the health care industry, found a 12 percent decline in opioid prescriptions nationally since a peak in 2012, the Times reported. Another data company, Symphony Health Solutions, reported an 18 percent drop during the same time period, the newspaper said. And IMS also found that opioid prescriptions have fallen in 49 states since 2013.

But those figures have not translated into fewer fatal overdoses from opioids, the newspaper added. Those statistics continue to increase, with more than 28,000 deaths reported in 2014, according to the most recent federal health data.

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