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You can help reverse the overdose epidemic
AI Summary
This documentary explores the US opioid overdose epidemic and how naloxone (Narcan) can save lives as an over-the-counter antidote. Learners will pick up important health and policy vocabulary such as 'opioid antagonist,' 'harm reduction,' 'stigma,' 'synthetic opioids,' and 'fentanyl.' The video is ideal for building English skills around public health topics while learning about community-based approaches to crisis response.
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Subtitles (131 segments)
DownloadYou're looking at a chart of annual US drug overdose deaths going back to 1980.
You can see it getting slightly worse almost every year, then rising more dramatically
starting in the 90s, mainly driven by overdoses on prescription opioids.
Overdose deaths accelerate in a second wave through the 2000s, and starting in 2013, a
catastrophic third wave emerges, kicked off by highly potent synthetic opioids like fentanyl.
But by the end of the 2010s, the fatal overdose epidemic in the US almost looked like it was
starting to take a turn.
The annual number of deaths dropped for the first time since the crisis started.
But then…
Stay at home, that is the order tonight.
Coronavirus emergency.
Living in lockdown.
As daily life became more isolated, US overdose deaths reached new heights.
In 2021, the annual death toll from drug overdoses crossed the 100,000 mark for the first time,
killing more Americans that year than firearms and fatal car crashes combined.
Historically, America's strategy for reducing drug use has been broad prohibition and criminalization
of both selling and using drugs.
But you can see that criminalizing drug use hasn't stopped the overdose death rates upward
trend.
But gradually, the US is starting to turn to different methods to fight the ongoing overdose
epidemic.
And one of them is something you and I can do starting today.
For the last 10 years, the most significant cause of fatal overdoses by far are cheaper,
stronger, and widely distributed synthetic opioids, namely fentanyl.
Elicitfentanil is up to 50 times more potent than heroin and is often mixed into other drugs
to make them stronger and more addictive.
The result is that it's often consumed unknowingly.
Full subtitles available in the video player
Key Vocabulary (15)
Used to refer to the person or people that the speaker is addressing. It is the second-person pronoun used for both singular and plural subjects and objects.
before all
A large-scale outbreak of an infectious disease that spreads rapidly within a specific population or region. It can also refer to a sudden, widespread increase in an undesirable social phenomenon or behavior.
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