Naloxone kit and opioid awareness materials for an article about fentanyl overdose deaths

Fentanyl overdose deaths in the U.S. fall by a third in a historic reversal

After more than a decade of relentless climbing, the number of Americans dying from fentanyl overdoses dropped sharply — by roughly a third — marking what public health officials are calling one of the most significant reversals in the history of the opioid epidemic. Provisional data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention showed total drug overdose deaths falling from a peak of around 112,000 in 2023 C.E. to an estimated 80,000 in 2024 C.E., with synthetic opioids like fentanyl driving most of the decline.

At a glance

  • Fentanyl overdose deaths: Provisional CDC data shows a drop of approximately 35% in fentanyl-involved deaths from 2023 C.E. to 2024 C.E. — the steepest single-year decline on record.
  • Naloxone distribution: Expanded access to the overdose-reversal drug naloxone, including over-the-counter approval of Narcan in 2023 C.E., is credited by researchers as a major driver of lives saved.
  • Treatment access: Removal of federal restrictions on buprenorphine prescribing in 2023 C.E. allowed tens of thousands more people to begin medication-assisted treatment without a special waiver.

How the tide turned

The decline didn’t happen by accident. It came after years of sustained, overlapping efforts — at the federal, state, and community level — that finally began to compound.

The Biden administration’s HHS Overdose Prevention Strategy expanded harm reduction funding, supported syringe service programs, and pushed naloxone into pharmacies and community organizations. By 2024 C.E., naloxone had become widely available without a prescription across most of the country. Community organizations — many of them led by people with lived experience of addiction — had been distributing it in parks, shelters, and apartment hallways for years. That groundwork mattered.

At the same time, the DEA and international partners intensified efforts to disrupt fentanyl supply chains, particularly targeting precursor chemicals flowing from China into Mexican cartel manufacturing networks. Seizures of fentanyl at the border reached record levels, and some researchers believe supply-side disruptions contributed to the drop alongside demand-side interventions.

Medication-assisted treatment goes mainstream

One of the quieter but more consequential policy shifts was the elimination of the X-waiver — a federal requirement that physicians complete special training before prescribing buprenorphine, a medication that suppresses opioid cravings and dramatically reduces overdose risk. For years, that barrier kept treatment out of reach in rural areas and underserved communities.

With the waiver gone, SAMHSA reported a notable increase in buprenorphine prescribers in 2024 C.E. Primary care doctors, nurse practitioners, and rural health clinics that previously couldn’t offer this treatment now could. For many patients, that meant treatment came to them rather than requiring a long drive to a specialty clinic.

Research published in JAMA and NEJM has consistently shown that medications like buprenorphine and methadone cut overdose mortality by 50% or more among people who stay in treatment. Getting more people into treatment — and keeping them there — is the most evidence-backed intervention known.

Who is still being left behind

The decline, while real and historic, has not reached every community equally. CDC data shows that Black Americans, American Indian and Alaska Native communities, and people experiencing homelessness continued to see disproportionately high overdose rates even as national numbers fell. Fentanyl has increasingly been detected in stimulants like methamphetamine and cocaine, catching people off guard who don’t think of themselves as opioid users and may not carry naloxone.

Rural areas remain underserved by treatment infrastructure, and stigma continues to delay care for millions. The Drug Policy Alliance and other advocates argue that without deeper investment in housing stability, mental health services, and decriminalization approaches, the gains risk being temporary.

Still, a 35% drop in a single year — in a crisis that killed more Americans annually than car crashes and gun violence combined at its peak — is a number worth sitting with. It represents tens of thousands of people still alive in 2024 C.E. who would not have been under the prior trajectory.

What this tells us about public health

The fentanyl reversal is a case study in what happens when evidence-based policy, harm reduction, and community organizing work together at scale. For years, critics dismissed naloxone distribution as “enabling” drug use. They were wrong. Decades of research — and now this data — show clearly that keeping people alive is what makes recovery possible.

The lesson here isn’t that the opioid crisis is over. It isn’t. But it is, for the first time in a long time, going in the right direction.

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For more on this story, see: Fentanyl overdose deaths in the U.S. are now falling sharply

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