Chester County Coroner’s Office Releases Mid-Year Report on Fatal Drug Overdoses

By

The Chester County Coroner’s Office has released data on drug-overdose deaths in Chester County from Jan. 1 through June 30 of this year.

A total of 65 people have been confirmed to have died of a drug overdose during this period, with 62 deaths determined to be accidental and three due to suicide. While this is slightly more than the 57 overdose deaths reported midway through 2018, the Coroner’s Office cautions that it is not possible to accurately predict a total for all of 2019.

In 2018, Pennsylvania had the third-highest rate of drug-overdose deaths in the country, but overall overdose deaths decreased last year. According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) data, Pennsylvania saw an 18.8 percent decrease in overdose deaths in 2018. Chester County was one of many counties contributing to that welcome decrease. The Coroner’s Office reported 112 accidental overdose deaths in 2018, a 22 percent drop from 2017.

The demographic profile of those who have died of an accidental drug overdose so far in 2019 is similar to that of previous years, with the affected population remaining predominantly male (77 percent), white (80 percent), and in the 25-44 year age range.

Toxicological tests show that fentanyl, a synthetic opioid found in almost 76 percent of the cases, continues to be the predominant drug responsible for overdose deaths in Chester County. No other substance comes close, but most fatalities involve multiple drugs, both illicit and prescription.

Heroin, the next most common drug, was present in 22.6 percent of Chester County cases. Acetyl fentanyl, another synthetic opioid, and xylazine, a large animal anesthetic, were both found in 19.4 percent of cases, always in combination with fentanyl. The Coroner’s Office issued a statement about xylazine when it first appeared in Chester County overdose deaths early this year. Ethanol (alcohol) and prescription benzodiazepines like alprazolam were found in 17.7 percent and 16.1 percent of cases, respectively. So far this year, cocaine, amphetamine, and methamphetamine have been detected in less than 15 percent of drug deaths.

“People in Chester County continue to die from drug overdoses largely due to the super-strong opioid fentanyl,” said Chester County Coroner Dr. Christina VandePol. “This is not your prescription painkiller; it’s an illegal street drug often substituted for heroin. The 2018 drop in deaths is encouraging, but the recent uptick shows we can’t relax prevention, law enforcement, or treatment approaches in an effort to bring an end to this epidemic.”

[uam_ad id=”80503″]

.

[uam_ad id=”80502″]

Connect With Your Community

Subscribe to stay informed!

"*" indicates required fields

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Advertisement
Creative Capital logo