U.S. Falls to 8th Globally in Per Capita Opioid Sales
/By Pat Anson, PNN Editor
Concerns about opioid addiction and overdoses have caused opioid sales to plummet in the United States in recent years. Opioid consumption has fallen so sharply that Canada, Australia and several European countries have overtaken the U.S. and become the highest consumers of opioid analgesics, according to a new study.
But in many poor and middle-income countries, access to opioids remains very limited, causing unnecessary pain and suffering for millions of sick and dying people.
“There are still concerningly low rates of opioid use in large parts of the world, even in numerous middle-income countries,” said lead author Wallis Lau, PhD, a Lecturer at the School of Pharmacy, University College London.
“Opioids have been listed by the World Health Organization as an essential class of medicine for acute pain, cancer-related pain, and palliative care since 1977, so it is troubling that in many parts of the world, people are unable to access this medicine. There is an urgent need to tackle the global gap in opioid access.”
Lau and her colleagues analyzed global pharmaceutical sales in 66 countries from 2015 to 2019. They found that opioid use in some African and South American countries was less than one tenth of 1% of the rates in wealthier countries in North America, Europe and Australia, according to findings published in The Lancet Public Health.
The highest opioid rate was found in Canada, estimated at 988 milligram morphine equivalents (MME) per day for every 1,000 people. That was down from an average of 1,581 MME per day in Canada in 2015.
By comparison, the U.S. rate was 738 MME per 1,000/day, a 45% decline since 2015. Long touted as having the highest per capita opioid consumption in the world, the U.S. now ranks 8th globally in opioid sales.
At the other end of the scale, a group of 12 West African countries reported only 0.01 MME per 1,000/day. A few other countries, including three in South America, reported rates below 1 MME per 1,000/day.
Opioid Sales Per Capita (2019)
Researchers say the disparities in opioid consumption go beyond factors such as a nation’s wealth, healthcare quality and disease prevalence. For example, wealthy countries such as the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia reported very low rates of opioid use. Kazakhstan also reported low rates of opioid consumption, despite having high cancer prevalence and high cancer death rates.
“Some countries have low opioid analgesic consumption despite a high cancer prevalence, which could suggest inadequate access to opioid analgesics as much-needed pain control,” said Lau.
Overall, global opioid sales increased by 4% annually from 2015 to 2019. Opioid consumption rates increased in most areas that reported low use, including Eastern Europe, Asia, and South America, but not in Africa.
“These findings reinforce the need to recognise palliative care and pain relief as a global public health priority. In countries that already have good access to opioid analgesics, it is important to avoid opioid misuse and overprescribing, without leaving patients undertreated.” said co-senior author Professor Ian Wong of UCL School of Pharmacy and University of Hong Kong.
According to a 2017 international study commissioned by The Lancet, over 25 million people die annually in severe pain because they have little or no access to morphine and other painkillers. Another 35 million people live with chronic pain that is untreated. The Lancet commission said there were several barriers that stood in the way of effectively treating pain, including “opiophobia” – prejudice and misinformation about the medical value of opioids.
“Unbalanced laws and excessive regulation perpetuate a negative feedback loop of poor access that mainly affects poor people,” the commission said.