'Deaths of despair' are at an all-time high in America

Oxycodone opioid tablets.
(Image credit: iStockphoto)

On Wednesday, the Commonwealth Fund released a report billed as a "scorecard" for the U.S.'s health systems. And it doesn't look good.

Among the most troubling parts of the report is the fact that based off of data from 2017, deaths caused by drug overdose, alcohol, and suicide have reached an "all-time high," NBC News reported. These so-called "deaths of despair" have risen nationally, but they affect different states in vastly different ways. For example, drug overdose deaths predictably hit hardest in areas affected by the opioid epidemic, mainly concentrated in the northeastern states. Midwestern states, meanwhile, have a higher rate of deaths by suicide or alcohol.

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Shivani is the editorial assistant at TheWeek.com and has previously written for StreetEasy and Mic.com. A graduate of the physics and journalism departments at NYU, Shivani currently lives in Brooklyn and spends free time cooking, watching TV, and taking too many selfies.