LA County saw 22% drop in overdose deaths in 2024 as fentanyl fatalities fall sharply, report finds

LOS ANGELES (KABC) — Drug over­dos­es have always been a major con­cern in the U.S., but new data shows that deaths have dropped sig­nif­i­cant­ly.

After years of sound­ing the alarm through var­i­ous cam­paigns, pub­lic health offi­cials report that drug over­dose deaths have plunged 22%. Between 2023 and 2024, over­dose and poi­son­ing deaths fell from 3,137 to 2,438 total. That’s the most sig­nif­i­cant drop in L.A. Coun­ty his­to­ry.

Fen­tanyl-relat­ed deaths dropped below that of metham­phet­a­mine-relat­ed deaths,” said Dr. Gary Tsai, Direc­tor of L.A. Coun­ty’s Sub­stance Abuse Pre­ven­tion and Con­trol Bureau.

For years, fen­tanyl had been the major dri­ver of acci­den­tal over­dos­es. Tsai said the break­down includes a 37% decline in fen­tanyl deaths and a 20% drop in metham­phet­a­mine-relat­ed deaths.

One rea­son for the decline? The wide­spread acces­si­bil­i­ty of a drug designed to reverse opi­oid over­dos­es.

“Nalox­one is wide­ly avail­able now, much more wide­ly avail­able now than it ever has been. We think that this is a very sig­nif­i­cant con­trib­u­tor to the reduc­tions in fen­tanyl over­dos­es,” he said.

Tsai also cred­its more mon­ey being spent on drug pre­ven­tion, treat­ment, recov­ery ser­vices and mes­sag­ing that appears to be reach­ing L.A. Coun­ty youth. Coun­ty offi­cials fear fed­er­al fund­ing cuts could under­mine local gains.

Nation­wide, Jan­u­ary num­bers revealed drug deaths are start­ing to rise, but not local­ly.

“We are not see­ing an uptick; we are see­ing a con­tin­u­al decline, which is good news. But giv­en the nation­al num­bers, this tells us that the progress that we’re mak­ing around over­dose deaths is ten­u­ous,” Tsai said.

Adults between 40 and 64 years old were most affect­ed, fol­lowed by those between 26 and 49. The data shows males con­tin­ue to account for the major­i­ty of deaths.

Over­dos­es occurred in Black res­i­dents dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly, while white and Lati­no res­i­dents rep­re­sent the high­est raw num­bers of fatal­i­ties, the report found