After several years of steep increases, overdose deaths in Minnesota plateaued in 2022 — but fentanyl-related overdoses continued to keep deaths at a historically high level.
There were 1,343 overdose deaths in Minnesota in 2022, according to preliminary data from the Minnesota Department of Health. That is a slight decline from 1,356 the year before. Both are about twice what was reported in 2018.
Fentanyl is involved in 92% of all opioid-involved deaths and nearly two-thirds of all overdose deaths statewide, according to the early data for 2022. Fentanyl is 50 times more potent than heroin.
According to Dr. Brooke Cunningham, the state's health commissioner, MDH is responding to the threat of fentanyl with a new policy for saving lives passed by the Legislature this year, including increasing the availability of naloxone and covering its costs.
As of July, the state Comprehensive Drug Overdose and Morbidity Prevention Act required all schools, law enforcement officials, emergency responders and residential treatment programs to have naloxone readily available.
Naloxone is a medication used to reverse drug overdoses involving opioids. It doesn't work with other types of drugs, and overdoses frequently involve multiple drugs, but it is "always helpful, never harmful," said Mary DeLaquil, an MDH epidemiologist.
Deaths involving heroin in 2022 were the lowest in a decade, falling by 56% from 2021 to 2022. Other deaths with prescribed opioids and methadone also saw a decline.
Cocaine-involved deaths saw the largest increase of any drug category, rising by 27%.