Heroin Deaths In Denver Up 933 Percent In 14 Years, Colorado Numbers Shocking

In recent years, we’ve reported about concerns over heroin use in Denver, and statistics from over the past decade-plus, including provisional data for 2016, demonstrate that there’s definitely reason for worry. According to numbers assembled by the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, heroin-related fatalities in Denver have increased a staggering 933 percent since 2002.

The rise is nearly as steep on a statewide basis. During the past fifteen years, fatalities related to heroin in Colorado as a whole are up 756 percent, and they’ve kept escalating during the past three years even as heroin deaths in Denver have leveled off.

CDPHE provided the information to Westword under the auspices of Kirk Bol, manager of the agency’s registries and vital-statistics branch, as well as chair of its internal review board. When it comes to heroin, he describes the situation with straightforward simplicity. “Heroin use has gone up,” he says.

That’s definitely the case in recent Denver history. In 2001, the first year listed in the CDPHE’s report, there were no Mile High City deaths directly attributable to heroin: zero. (Statewide in 2001, 23 people died from heroin use.) This performance was actually repeated in 2004, and in general, as shown in the full statistics shared below, the fatality figures stayed in the single digits for the next five years.

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
Colorado 23 27 23 22 41 39 39 46
Denver 0 3 3 0 4 6 12 16

 

2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 (provisional)
Colorado 69 46 79 91 118 151 160 197
Denver 32 21 24 17 25 35 32 31

Source: http://www.westword.com/news/heroin-deaths-in-denver-up-933-percent-in-14-years-colorado-numbers-shocking-8847581 March 2017

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