Titre : | Macroeconomic Conditions and Opioid Abuse. |
Titre de série : | NBER Working Paper, n° 23192 |
Auteurs : | A. HOLLINGSWORTH ; C.J. RHUM ; K.I. SIMON ; National Bureau of Economic Research. (N.B.E.R.). Cambridge CA. USA |
Type de document : | Document de travail |
Editeur : | Cambridge : N.B.E.R., 2017 |
Format : | 65p.,tabl., fig., annexes |
Note générale : | Référence : réf. bibl. |
Langues: | Anglais |
Catégories : |
[BDSP5] Information sanitaire > Etat santé [BDSP5] Information sanitaire > Mesure santé > Indicateur santé > Mortalité [BDSP5] Organisation hospitalière > Structure hospitalière > Urgence hospitalière [BDSP5] Sciences économiques > Conjoncture économique & sociale [BDSP5] Sciences économiques > Conjoncture économique & sociale > Crise économique |
Résumé : | Past research indicates that physical health measures (such as all-cause mortality) improve when economic conditions temporarily deteriorate, but the relationship between economic conditions and behavioral health remain unclear. The pro-cyclicality of mortality has declined in recent years while drug poisoning deaths have trended sharply upwards, suggesting a connection to the rising use of many types of drugs. We contribute new evidence to the literature by examining how severe, adverse outcomes related to use of opioid analgesics (hereafter abbreviated as opioids) and other drugs vary with short-term fluctuations in macroeconomic conditions. We use data on deaths and emergency department (ED) visits related to opioid and other drug poisonings together with information on state and county unemployment rates. We focus on opioids because they are a major driver of the recent, fatal drug epidemic. We use county-level mortality data for the entire U.S. from 1999-2014, and state and county level ED data covering 2002-2014 from a subset of states. We find that as the county unemployment rate increases by 1 percentage point, the opioid death rate (per 100,000) rises by 0.19 (3.6%) and the ED visit rate for opioid overdoses (per 100,000) increases by 0.95 (7.0%). We also uncover statistically significant increases in the overall drug death rate that are driven in most specifications by increases in opioid deaths. These results hold when performing a state, rather than county, level analysis. The results are primarily driven by adverse events among whites, although there is some sensitivity to choice of models in the results for nonwhites. Additionally, the findings are relatively stable across time periods; they do not pertain only to recession years, but instead represent a more generalizable and previously unexplored connection between economic development and the severe adverse consequences of substance abuse |
En ligne : | www.nber.org/papers/w23192 |