Ezell Jerel M
From the University of California, Berkeley School of Public Health Community Health Sciences, Berkeley, CA.
J Addict Med. 2023;17(5):500-502. doi: 10.1097/ADM.0000000000001201. Epub 2023 Jul 20.
Ongoing assessments by climate scientists, including a recent report from the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, punctuate the pronounced effect that climate change is poised to have in the near future on the health and well-being of humans-particularly those with low socioeconomic status-throughout the world. To this end, to date, very limited scholarly attention has been placed on the effects that climate change may have on people who use drugs (PWUDs), in particular those with opioid use disorder, and assessed their structural and social determinants of climate change vulnerability. Since COVID-19, which has key lessons to offer on climate change's potential effects on PWUDs, the opioid epidemic has been rapidly accelerating in terms of its socioeconomic, racial, and geographic reach. The opioid epidemic has been further deepened by increasing fentanyl contamination and co-use with stimulants such as methamphetamine and (crack) cocaine, spurring a heavy increase in overdose deaths. These trends highlight a looming confrontation between the world's complex overdose crisis and its equally intensifying climate emergency. This piece contextualizes the specter of harms that climate change is likely to cultivate against PWUDs and offers strategies for mitigation.
气候科学家正在进行的评估,包括联合国政府间气候变化专门委员会最近的一份报告,都凸显了气候变化在不久的将来对全球人类健康和福祉——尤其是社会经济地位低下者——将产生的显著影响。为此,迄今为止,学术界对气候变化可能对吸毒者(PWUDs),特别是患有阿片类药物使用障碍的人产生的影响以及评估他们在气候变化脆弱性方面的结构和社会决定因素的关注非常有限。自新冠疫情以来,它为气候变化对吸毒者的潜在影响提供了重要教训,阿片类药物流行在社会经济、种族和地理范围方面一直在迅速加速。芬太尼污染加剧以及与甲基苯丙胺和(快克)可卡因等兴奋剂共同使用,进一步加深了阿片类药物流行,导致过量用药死亡人数大幅增加。这些趋势凸显了世界复杂的过量用药危机与其同样加剧的气候紧急情况之间迫在眉睫的对抗。本文将气候变化可能给吸毒者带来的危害情景化,并提供缓解策略。