U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government, Department of Justice.

NCJRS Virtual Library

The Virtual Library houses over 235,000 criminal justice resources, including all known OJP works.
Click here to search the NCJRS Virtual Library

The Current Community Context of Overdose Deaths: Relations among Drug Types, Drug Markets, and Socioeconomic Neighborhood Characteristics

NCJ Number
302690
Journal
Sociological Forum Volume: 23 Dated: August 2021
Author(s)
Jascha Wagner; Logan Neitzke-Spruill ; Ellen A. Donnelly ; Daniel J. O’Connell ; Tammy L. Anderson
Date Published
August 2021
Annotation

This study used group-based multi-trajectory models and path analysis to assess relations among neighborhood opioid-overdose death trends, drug type compositions, and socioeconomic neighborhood characteristics across Delaware from 2013 to 2017.

Abstract

Increases in opioid overdose deaths have been pronounced throughout the nation. The current narrative about them stresses their reach into middle-class America, and theories that link substance-use etiology and drug markets, such as availability-proneness theory, suggest that lower-income communities should be most impacted. The latter might be especially true due to the increased involvement of cheap and highly potent fentanyl. The current study found support for availability-proneness theory, insofar as drug availability and substance use were associated with neighborhoods in the trajectory groups with the highest overdose death rates. Moreover, the study found that neighborhood disadvantage was associated with increased drug availability as well as substance use. The study results also suggest that open-air drug market access might be associated with an increased risk of fentanyl and heroin exposure which, in turn, can lead to spikes in overdoses net of other risk factors. Overall, the findings reveal the social character of the opioid epidemic and inform the literature on social inequality and drug use. This highlights the need for community reinvestment and harm-reduction strategies to alleviate the drug problems in the most disadvantaged communities. (publisher abstract modified)