What exactly are these percentages supposed to mean? Number of people addicted to drugs? In that case, you’d be hard-pressed to find a city below 50%, between caffeine, nicotine, and alcohol. Number of people who have ever used an illegal drug? Number of people currently using? Number of people who have demonstrable problems as a result of drug use, or of illegal drug use?
There are no sources listed aside from a single reference to Castlight Health, whatever that is.
That said, I do know that heroin (and meth) is the white people’s crack, and the illegal heroin industry is focused on small towns and not big cities. This is a major problem because these small towns don’t have the resources to fight it, whether it be in the form of treatment or law enforcement. It’s white America’s worst nightmare come true.
It appears that they analyzed data from employer group insurance plans (i.e., not Medicare/Medicaid or the uninsured, although I suppose it includes dependents of employees on family plans). Hence, I think the percentages are of people covered by such plans.
Interesting that no cities in the legal Marijuana states made the list. Makes the theory that Marijuana leads to other, more dangerous drugs look a bit shaky.
I had heard that opiods were an enormous problem in WV. Apparently cash-strapped families get the script in order to sell the pills. Prices for generic opiods with any kind of insurance coverage is low, so a low income family can usually afford to purchase them and make a significant profit selling them on the black market. Physicians know this and are quietly complicit.
Legal marijuana and the stupendous increase in opioid abuse are not related at all.
The opioid problem is a direct result of an increase in prescribing due to a misinformation campaign from the drug companies and new and more potent forms of opioids.
As a result, prescribing practices are becoming much more stringent and the supply of “legal” narcotics is finally starting to decrease. Cheap heroin and other “illegal” narcotics are rapidly increasing to fill that void.
Legalization of marijuana may, at some point, contribute to opioid abuse, but what has been happening for the last 20 years isn’t due to marijuana.