Drug deaths in the U.S. have plunged dramatically and steadily since the summer of 2023, according to the latest preliminary data released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Figures released this month by in the 12-month period ending in March of this year. That's the lowest tally of provisional predicted deaths from fentanyl and other street drugs since at least March 2020.
Despite the prolonged decline in overdose deaths, dating back to the middle of the Biden administration, President Donald Trump has continued to base a range of controversial policies — from trade tariffs to tougher criminal penalties — on his claim that fentanyl poses a growing threat to Americans.
Last month, ," establishing 10-year mandatory minimum prison sentences for people convicted of trafficking fentanyl.
"We renew our vow to liberate America from this horrible plague. We'll be getting the drug dealers, pushers, and peddlers off our streets," . "We will not rest until we've ended the drug overdose epidemic."
Trump has also targeting drug cartels; imposed tariffs on nations based in part on ; and .
According to Trump, his campaign in Washington, D.C., was also motivated in part by his desire to from visible areas of the nation's capital and pressure them to accept treatment.
In an interview with NPR, Dr. Stephen Taylor, head of the American Society of Addiction Medicine, called those tactics misguided: "[Addiction] is a chronic illness," Taylor said. "It's not the kind of thing where you sweep people up, you get them better and then they're cured forever."
Critics of Trump's approach to the fentanyl fight also fear progress reducing overdose deaths could be crippled by .
Big urban states and small rural states see dramatic improvement
But for now, drug deaths continue to ease, with many states seeing 30-40% improvements in the last year alone.
In West Virginia, fatal overdoses fell from 1,330 in the 12-month period through March 2024 to 772 in the 12-month period through March 2025. The provisional data suggests a stunning decline of nearly 42 percent.
Also, states with much higher population, including California, Florida and New York, are seeing big drops in deaths caused by street drugs. In all, drug deaths have eased by roughly one third from the peak measured in 2023.
Public health and addiction experts continue to study why overdoses are falling so precipitously.
Some cite successful efforts in disrupting criminal fentanyl supply chains. Others point to a rapid improvement in health care and treatment for people experiencing addiction.
The latest CDC data also revises in drug deaths in the 12-month period ending in January of this year. The new data suggests fatal overdoses have now fallen consistently, without interruption, since the summer of 2023.
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