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Thursday, May 23, 2024

Drug-overdose death rates were more common among service-industry employees before pandemic, but not afterward

By Allison Rogers
University of Kentucky

Drug-overdose deaths spiked following Kentucky’s Covid-19 stay-at-home and business-closure orders in 2020, but the industries that suffered the most overdose deaths were surprising, according to research conducted by the Kentucky Injury Prevention and Research Center at the University of Kentucky College of Public Health.

In the years leading up to the study, Kentucky’s service-industry employees experienced the most drug-overdose deaths. However, workers outside service industries were more likely to die by drug overdose in the months following the Covid-related shutdowns of 2020, the researchers found.

The study was published in the peer-reviewed journal Injury Prevention in 2023 and funded by the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health, part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Graph by Kentucky Injury Prevention Research Center
Analyzing drug-overdose death certificates and toxicology tests from 2018 through 2021, researchers found a significant increase in deaths rates for both sectors. In 2019, the rate per 100,000 employees was 46.7 and 45.7 for service and non-service industries, respectively. In 2021, those rates were 76.2 and 81.9.

Service occupations with the highest drug-overdose death rates were restaurant wait staff (10%), cooks (7%), landscaping and groundskeeping workers (6%) and auto-service technicians and mechanics (6%). Among non-service-industry jobs, overdose deaths occurred most often among construction laborers (15%), carpenters (7%) and freight, stock and material movers and hand occupations (7%).

From 2018 through 2021, there were 1,789 drug overdose deaths among service-industry workers in Kentucky, compared to 2,838 for non-service workers.

Terry Bunn, lead author of the study and director of the injury-prevention center, said “Service-related industry employees may have been more resilient and adaptable to changes in employment status compared to non-service-related industries and could find employment in other essential industry sectors during the pandemic such as the home improvement and building materials industry and the grocery store industry sector.”

Fentanyl was the most commonly identified drug in overdose deaths in both industry groupings, with 44% of identified substances among service-related industry deaths and 48% of identified substances among non-service-related deaths. The second most common drug with elevated frequencies detected in drug-overdose deaths was methamphetamine, with 24% of identified substances among service-related industry deaths and 28% of identified substances among non-service-related industry deaths.

Bunn hopes the results will alert employers in all industries to the need for a plan to handle on-site drug overdoses and substance use. “It is important for businesses to know about local community resources for timely linkage to substance use disorder treatment and to recovery support services as well as availability of on-site naloxone,” she said.

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