U.S. teens fastest growing group to die of Fentanyl overdoses: BBC
LONDON, Oct.21 (Xinhua) -- More than 100,000 Americans died of drug overdoses last year -- the vast majority were adults, but the fastest growing group to die of overdoses were teenagers, the BBC has reported.
Fentanyl is now increasingly being mass-produced into pills in rainbow colors to mimic prescription pills and target kids who are more willing to experiment with them, BBC said in a recent report.
The United States is an outlier when it comes to overdoses, with a death rate 20 times the global average -- although Scotland is not far behind, said the report.
"We are far and away the world leader in overdose death, unfortunately," the report cited Joseph Friedman, a substance use researcher at the University of California Los Angeles, as saying.
The overdose rate among school-aged children in the United States doubled between 2019 and 2020 and then rose a further 20 percent last year, he said.
Photos
Related Stories
- U.S. pediatric hospitals overwhelmed as respiratory syncytial virus rages
- U.S. CDC warns of respiratory syncytial virus outbreak in children
- U.S. House panel issues subpoena to Trump over Capitol riot
- Weekly storage of natural gas in U.S. increases: EIA
- Inflation costs American households 445 extra U.S. dollars a month, says analysis
- Race gap seen in U.S. infant deaths after fertility treatment: report
- Racism never left U.S. schools: scholar
- U.S. high school students pledge to end gun violence: Fox8
Copyright © 2022 People's Daily Online. All Rights Reserved.