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    More Older Adults Abusing Drugs and Dying From Overdoses

    Prescription Medicine.

    A growing number of older adults are abusing drugs and dying from overdoses, The Wall Street Journal reports. Baby Boomers, born between 1946 and 1964, are turning to drugs as they face the challenges of aging, health officials say.

    As young people, the Baby Boomer generation used drugs at the highest rates of any generation, the article notes. They are growing older in an era of widespread abuse of opioid painkillers.

    A survey by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration found marijuana is the most popular drug of abuse among aging Baby Boomers, followed by pain pills. In this age group, painkillers are the drug most often involved in overdoses, followed by anti-anxiety drugs.

    Wilson Compton, Deputy Director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, calls the increase in overdose deaths among this age group very concerning. “Generally, we thought of older individuals as not having a risk for drug abuse and drug addiction,” Dr. Compton said. “As the baby boomers have aged and brought their habits with them into middle age, and now into older adult groups, we are seeing marked increases in overdose deaths.”

    An analysis of data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) finds the rate of death from accidental drug overdoses among people ages 45 to 64 rose 11-fold between 1990 and 2010. In 2013, more than 12,000 Baby Boomers died of accidental drug overdoses—more than the number who died in car accidents or from influenza and pneumonia, the CDC said.

    Government researchers estimate more than 5.7 million people over age 50 will need substance abuse treatment by 2020. Rehab centers are adjusting their treatment for older clients. They are providing more medical care on site, getting rid of bunk beds and hiring more experienced addiction counselors.