Rethinking urban-rural designations in public health surveillance of the overdose crisis and crafting an agenda for future monitoring

Int J Drug Policy. 2023 Aug:118:104072. doi: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2023.104072. Epub 2023 Jun 14.

Abstract

Rurality has served as a key concept in popular and scientific understandings of the US overdose crisis, with White, rural, and low-income areas thought to be most heavily affected. However, we observe that overdose trends have risen nearly uniformly across the urban-rural designations employed in most research, implying that their importance has likely been overstated or incorrectly conceptualized. Nevertheless, urbanicity/rurality does serve as a key axis to understand inequalities in overdose mortality when assessed with more nuanced modalities-employing a more granular analysis of geography at the sub-county level, and intersecting rurality sociodemographic indices such as race/ethnicity. Using national overdose data from 1999-2021, we illustrate the intersectional importance of rurality for overdose surveillance. Finally, we offer recommendations for integrating these insights into drug overdose surveillance moving forward.

Keywords: Ethnography; Inequality; Opioids; Overdose; Rural urban categories; Surveillance.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Drug Overdose* / epidemiology
  • Humans
  • Public Health Surveillance*
  • Rural Population
  • Urban Population