After a year in which Minneapolis first responders were called to a record 1,400 suspected drug overdoses, they are on pace to match that total in 2021.
Firefighters responded to at least 1,361 nonfatal and fatal overdose calls during a pandemic-stricken 2020 — many involving opioids — an increase of 25% from the roughly 1,089 such incidents that they handled in 2019, according to a Star Tribune analysis of thousands of incident reports. The pace of overdose calls in the first three months of this year put the city on track to nearly equal 2020's final tally.
Fire personnel administered nearly 900 doses of the opioid reversal drug, Narcan, last year — or more than twice a day, on average.
As COVID-19 swept through the U.S. last year, substance abuse experts and advocates say the country's opioid epidemic began to feel like a forgotten crisis. And yet, more than 90,000 Americans died by drug overdose in the 12 months ending in October 2020, according to preliminary federal data — more than the number of people killed by guns and car crashes last year combined.
Officials say that while most overdoses appear to be opioid-related, there has also been a rise in the use of stimulants like cocaine and methamphetamine.
The Star Tribune's analysis found that nonfatal and fatal overdoses surged locally last year, with previously hard-hit neighborhoods on the city's South Side again recording high numbers of calls. But the analysis also revealed that the opioid epidemic spread to other parts of the city unaccustomed to high calls.
The Star Tribune reviewed roughly 27 months of Fire Department reports, using keywords such as "overdose" "OD," "Narcan," and the names of other common opioids to identify calls that involved suspected overdoses. The figures almost certainly undercount overdoses since many go unreported and some victims go directly to the hospital or clinic to seek treatment. But, the data give the clearest picture yet of how the opioid crisis has spread through the city.
As in years past, overdose-related calls were most concentrated in the East Phillips neighborhood. Authorities in 2020 responded to at least 44 overdose calls in a two-block radius of a now-shuttered Speedway gas station at 25th and Bloomington avenues, the analysis shows. Another hot spot near the intersection of Franklin and Minnehaha avenues recorded 35 overdoses.