Record number of drug deaths in Mid Sussex last year

Drugs and drug-taking equipment. Drugs and drug-taking equipment.
Drugs and drug-taking equipment.
There was a record number of drug-related deaths in Mid Sussex last year, new figures show.

There was a record number of drug-related deaths in Mid Sussex last year, new figures show.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

It comes as drug deaths across England hit a record high, with health and social care provider Turning Point calling for further investment in addiction services.

Office for National Statistic figures show there were 11 drug poisoning deaths in Mid Sussex in 2022 – up from five the year before and the highest on record.

The figures cover drug abuse and dependence, fatal accidents, suicides and complications involving controlled and non-controlled drugs, prescription and over-the-counter medications.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Across England and Wales, there were 4,907 drug-related deaths in England and Wales in 2022 – the highest level since records began in 1993.

Clare Taylor, chief operating officer at Turning Point, said the high level of deaths is a tragedy.

She added: "Drug related deaths are preventable, and the right treatment and support for anyone at risk, in any community, remains the key protective factor."

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

She said government investment has allowed the addiction sector to increase treatment places and grow the workforce, but added it will take time before world class drug and alcohol treatment services are built.

"If the Government continues to invest in building up skills and capacity in the sector, we can turn the tide," she added.

Of the total drug-related deaths last year, 3,127 deaths were due to misuse, meaning they involved illegal drugs, or were a result of drug abuse or dependence.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

In Mid Sussex, eight of the deaths were identified as drug misuse.

Some 2,261 (46%) deaths last year involved an opiate, such as heroin or morphine, while 857 deaths involved cocaine, with the number rising for the 11th consecutive year.

Lee Fernandes, from the UK Addiction Treatment Group, said the figures show people who have been addicted to drugs for many years are now also experimenting with taking other substances which can make a user "increasingly susceptible to a fatal overdose".

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

He said such deaths are "unnecessary" and could be prevented with the right kind of help, empathy and professional support.

The ONS figures also show the age standardised mortality rate – which accounts for age and population size – stood at 3.9 drug-related deaths per 100,000 people in Mid Sussex between 2020 and 2022.

It was below the overall rate for England, of 8.1 deaths per 100,000 people.