Calculating the Real Cost of the Opioid Crisis
Calculating the Real Cost of the Opioid Crisis
Financially, the opioid crisis has crippled the U.S. economy. In fact, the Council of Economic Advisers (CEA) estimates the cost of the epidemic to have been “$696 billion in 2018, or 3.4 percent of GDP, and more than $2.5 trillion for the four-year period from 2015 to 2018.” In 2017, CEA issued a report which calculated the total cost by considering the “value of lost lives, as well as increases in healthcare and substance abuse treatment costs, increases in criminal justice costs, and reductions in productivity.” The updated estimates for 2018 were calculated using a similar methodology, which includes human lives lost.The CEA estimates are on the high side compared to other studies, because CEA accounts for the value of a statistical life (VSL). It uses this comprehensive measure because the opioid crisis is so much more than lost finances. It takes lives, which the CEA values well beyond the drugs’ effect on economic output.Due to provisions set forth by the Trump administration, the CEA estimates nearly “30,000 lives were saved from January 2017 through March 2019” and that “the cost of the opioid crisis would have been $326 billion higher between January 2017 and March 2019” had this focus not been put into place.
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Sources:
The Full Cost of the Opioid Crisis: $2.5 Trillion Over Four YeariThe changing face of the US opioid epidemic: Middle-aged black adults see rise in deathsOpioid Overdose Crisis
About Sara E. Teller
Sara is a credited freelance writer, editor, contributor, and essayist, as well as a novelist and poet with nearly twenty years of experience. A seasoned publishing professional, she's worked for newspapers, magazines and book publishers in content digitization, editorial, acquisitions and intellectual property. Sara has been an invited speaker at a Careers in Publishing & Authorship event at Michigan State University and a Reading and Writing Instructor at Sylvan Learning Center. She has an MBA degree with a concentration in Marketing and an MA in Clinical Mental Health Counseling, graduating with a 4.2/4.0 GPA. She is also a member of Chi Sigma Iota and a 2020 recipient of the Donald D. Davis scholarship recognizing social responsibility. Sara is certified in children's book writing, HTML coding and social media marketing. Her fifth book, PTSD: Healing from the Inside Out, was released in September 2019 and is available on Amazon. You can find her others books there, too, including Narcissistic Abuse: A Survival Guide, released in December 2017.