America is in the midst of an opioid-addiction crisis, and in recent years, it’s hit women particularly hard.
Between 1999 and 2015, the rate of deaths from prescription opioid overdoses increased 471 percent among women, compared with an increase of 218 percent among men. Heroin deaths among women increased also at more than twice the rate than among men during this period, according to a government report.
And because women in particular tend to be instrumental to the functioning of their families and communities, the jump in their addiction rates can have enormous effects on society at large.
“Morning Joe” co-host and Know Your Value founder Mika Brzezinski recently interviewed Dr. Dave Campbell, a Florida-based surgeon who has testified before Congress on the opioid crisis, about the pervasive problem.
“It’s disproportionately affecting women in a growing way, and by affecting women, it’s affecting families,” Campbell said. “There are a whole bunch of ways we can look at that: The incarceration rate for women has gone up 50 percent since the start of the opioid crisis. Heroin addiction has gone up 30 percent for women from 2010 to 2013.”
Brzezinski noted that even if it’s not the woman who is addicted, she’s likely the one who is stepping in and assisting with childrearing, caretaking and other responsibilities if a family member is struggling with addiction. “If it’s not a woman whose body is literally crumbling from addiction … it’s someone in her family who she has to take care of,” she said.
Campbell agreed, noting “the social safety nets that women trying to raise children need are profoundly affected by this opioid crisis.”
Babies and adolescents
The increase in women addicted to opioids also affects the most vulnerable population: newborns. Babies born to a woman who used opioids during her pregnancy may be born with neonatal abstinence syndrome, a term for a group of conditions that occur when a baby withdraws from narcotics.
“At birth they are addicted to opioids,” Campbell said. “They go through withdrawal, and it takes two days to two weeks to get through it: They’re irritable, they’re crying. They can’t eat.”
Adolescents are another group at particular risk, because “we know that the younger an adolescent is when they start using a substance for the first time — whether it’s alcohol or an illicit drug — the more likely they are as adults to be addicted,” Campbell said.
Making smart decisions about drugs can be challenging for this age group, Campbell said, noting that adolescent brains are not fully formed and their growth comes in stages. The reward system matures first, and the prefrontal cortex — the region that controls judgment — forms last, in their 20s, he explained.
Campbell cited a common analogy about the adolescent brain: It’s like a car with the gas pedal fully engaged, but it doesn’t have brakes yet.









