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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
Aine Fox,Miriam Burrell and Lydia Chantler-Hicks

London drug death rate will inevitably reach highs seen in US, warns police chief

London's drug poisoning death rate is at its highest in more than 20 years, with 56.6 deaths recorded per million people in the capital last year.

That's the highest drug death rate since 2000, when 58.4 deaths were recorded per million people in London.

Despite the spike, London had the lowest rate for drug poisonings compared with the rest of England and Wales in 2022, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said on Tuesday.

Deaths registered from drug poisoning in England and Wales are at the highest level since records began 30 years ago - with 4,907 deaths recorded last year.

Opiates were involved in just under half of such deaths, with heroin and morphine remaining the most frequently mentioned in registrations, the ONS said.

Experts have warned a surge in synthetic opioids have been linked to a number of deaths in London, and in the rest of the UK.

Synthetic opioids include fentanyl - a drug 50 times stronger than heroin and 100 times more potent than morphine.

Met Police Det Supt Helen Rance, who is investigating the discovery of a major synthetic opioid stash in Waltham Forest, told The Telegraph: “Synthetic opioids have been detected in batches of heroin found in London and across the UK.

"They substantially raise the risk of incredibly serious harm to the user, and are believed to be linked to a number of deaths.”

Prof Eamon Keenan, of the Health Safety Executive, told the newspaper: “These pose a substantial risk of overdose, hospitalisation, and death.”

Meanwhile Donna Jones, chair of the Association of Police and Crime Commissioners, told The Telegraph the Taliban's move to ban opium poppy farming last year is likely to lead to a surge in synthetic opioids.

Ms Jones said the move is set to "completely dry up the heroin supply...over the next 12 months, which means the Chinese synthetic opioid market is going to explode".

She said it is "inevitable" London and other British cities will see a further spike in deaths.

“It’s already happening in America, and heroin addicts in America are dying in their plenty because synthetic opioids like fentanyl are literally 50 times stronger than street heroin," she said.

"And it is so tragic.”

UK deaths involving cocaine have risen by 2.0 per cent and are now more than seven times higher than in 2011.

This is equivalent to a rate of 84.4 deaths per million people – slightly higher but similar to the rate recorded in 2021, which was 84.0 deaths per million people.

The ONS said there has been a rise in the number of drugs typically recorded on the death certificate, now averaging two drugs mentioned per death.

Drug-related deaths are preventable, and the right treatment and support for anyone at risk, in any community, remains the key protective factor

Clare Taylor, Turning Point

The average number of drugs mentioned has been gradually increasing since 2010, with the likes of benzodiazepines (a type of sedative) and gabapentinoids (sometimes used for pain management) more often now seen in use alongside heroin and other opiates.

Some 46.1 per cent, equivalent to 2,261 deaths registered last year, involved an opiate, while 857 deaths involved cocaine.

There were 114.3 drug-poisoning deaths registered per million in 2022 (3,240 deaths) among males, compared with 55.8 deaths per million among females (1,667 deaths), the ONS said.

Some 3,127 drug poisoning deaths were identified as drug misuse, accounting for 53.9 deaths per million people.

Drug misuse deaths involve those where the underlying cause is drug abuse or drug dependence, or where any of the substances involved are controlled under the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971.

The ONS noted that as information on specific drugs involved in a death is not always available, these figures are underestimates.

Drug misuse deaths continued to be higher among Gen X – those born in the 1970s, with the highest rate in those aged 40 to 49 years.

The North East continued to have the highest rates of deaths relating to drug poisoning (133.9 deaths per million people) and drug misuse (81.7 per million), while London had the lowest rate for drug poisonings (56.6 deaths per million people), and the East of England had the lowest rate for drug misuse (37.2 per million).

Vahe Nafilyan, from the ONS, said: “The number of drug poisoning deaths registered continues to increase and is now the highest since records began in 1993.

“Around half of deaths involve an opiate, such as heroin or morphine, while the number of cocaine deaths have risen for the eleventh consecutive year.

“Deaths continue to be highest among men, especially those born in the 1970s, often referred to as Generation X.”

Lee Fernandes, from the UK Addiction Treatment Group, said the report showed that people who have been addicted to drugs for many years “are now also experimenting with taking other substances” which can make a user “increasingly susceptible to a fatal overdose”.

He said such deaths are “unnecessary” and could be prevented “with the right kind of help, empathy and professional support”.

Clare Taylor, from health and social care provider Turning Point, said: “The continued high level of drug related deaths is a tragedy and our thoughts are with anyone who has lost someone this way.”

“Drug-related deaths are preventable, and the right treatment and support for anyone at risk, in any community, remains the key protective factor.”

The UK’s first drug consumption room could be open by next summer, after plans for such a facility were approved by NHS and council officials in Glasgow in September.

The UK Government has said it is not in favour of drug consumption rooms, but despite the Misuse of Drugs Act being reserved to Westminster, the Home Office has indicated it will not stand in the way of the pilot scheme in Scotland.

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