Consider This from NPR : NPR

by Curtis Jones
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Justin Carlyle, age 23, photographed on the street in Kensington, a neighborhood of Philadelphia, has lived with addiction to fentanyl and other drugs for a decade. After a decade when overdoses devastated young Americans, drug deaths among people in the U.S. under age 35 are plummeting. The shift is saving thousands of young lives every year.

Rachel Wisniewski/NPR


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Rachel Wisniewski/NPR


Justin Carlyle, age 23, photographed on the street in Kensington, a neighborhood of Philadelphia, has lived with addiction to fentanyl and other drugs for a decade. After a decade when overdoses devastated young Americans, drug deaths among people in the U.S. under age 35 are plummeting. The shift is saving thousands of young lives every year.

Rachel Wisniewski/NPR

Fentanyl and other street drugs killed more than 230 thousand people under the age of 35 in the U-S over the last decade.

But now new federal data shows drug deaths among young people are plummeting at an unprecedented rate – saving thousands of lives each year.

What’s driving the drop, and with federal funding cuts on the horizon will it continue?

For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.

Email us at considerthis@npr.org.

This episode was produced by Alejandra Marquez Janse.

It was edited by Andrea De Leon and Courtney Dorning.

Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.

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