Link between public policy life expectancy reinforced by new international research
"Our study shows that failed substance use policies can reverse life expectancy trends for large population groups or even countries," says Dr. Jürgen Rehm, Director of Social and Epidemiological Research at CAMH and first author of the study. "On the other hand, we also observed that effective policy changes are associated with substantial gains in life expectancy." The researchers investigated marked changes in life expectancy linked to substance use and related policies in three countries: the U.S., the former Union of Soviet Socialist Republics ( USSR ) and Mexico. In the U.S., prescription opioids are used in larger quantities than in any other country. Usage started increasing rapidly in the mid-1990s, partly as a result of allowing family doctors to prescribe short-acting opioids such as oxycodone for chronic pain and other relatively common diseases. Non-medical use of these substances and associated harms, including overdose deaths, increased alongsi...