TY - JOUR
T1 - Florida's opioid crackdown and mortality from drug overdose, motor vehicle crashes, and suicide
T2 - A Bayesian interrupted time-series analysis
AU - Feder, Kenneth A.
AU - Mojtabai, Ramin
AU - Stuart, Elizabeth A.
AU - Musci, Rashelle
AU - Letourneau, Elizabeth J.
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was conducted as part of K.A.F.’s doctoral dissertation, which was supported by a training grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (grant F31DA044699). K.A.F. thanks Drs. Becky Genberg and Michael Fingerhood for serving on his dissertation committee. Conflict of interest: none declared.
Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.
PY - 2020/9/1
Y1 - 2020/9/1
N2 - In 2011, Florida established a prescription drug monitoring program and adopted new regulations for independent pain-management clinics. We examined the association of those reforms with drug overdose deaths and other injury fatalities. Florida's postreform monthly mortality rates-for drug-involved deaths, motor vehicle crashes, and suicide by means other than poisoning-were compared with a counterfactual estimate of what those rates would have been absent reform. The counterfactual was estimated using a Bayesian structural time-series model based on mortality trends in similar states. By December 2013, drug overdose deaths were down 17% (95% credible interval: −21, −12), motor vehicle crash deaths were down 9% (95% credible interval: −14, −4), and suicide deaths were unchanged compared with what would be expected in the absence of reform. Florida's opioid prescribing reform substantially reduced drug overdose deaths. Reforms may also have reduced motor vehicle crash deaths but were not associated with a change in suicides. More research is needed to understand these patterns. Bayesian structural time-series modeling is a promising new approach to interrupted time-series studies.
AB - In 2011, Florida established a prescription drug monitoring program and adopted new regulations for independent pain-management clinics. We examined the association of those reforms with drug overdose deaths and other injury fatalities. Florida's postreform monthly mortality rates-for drug-involved deaths, motor vehicle crashes, and suicide by means other than poisoning-were compared with a counterfactual estimate of what those rates would have been absent reform. The counterfactual was estimated using a Bayesian structural time-series model based on mortality trends in similar states. By December 2013, drug overdose deaths were down 17% (95% credible interval: −21, −12), motor vehicle crash deaths were down 9% (95% credible interval: −14, −4), and suicide deaths were unchanged compared with what would be expected in the absence of reform. Florida's opioid prescribing reform substantially reduced drug overdose deaths. Reforms may also have reduced motor vehicle crash deaths but were not associated with a change in suicides. More research is needed to understand these patterns. Bayesian structural time-series modeling is a promising new approach to interrupted time-series studies.
KW - Drug policy
KW - Interrupted time series
KW - Mortality
KW - Opioids
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U2 - 10.1093/aje/kwaa015
DO - 10.1093/aje/kwaa015
M3 - Article
C2 - 32077469
AN - SCOPUS:85089814456
SN - 0002-9262
VL - 189
SP - 885
EP - 893
JO - American journal of epidemiology
JF - American journal of epidemiology
IS - 9
ER -