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Overdose deaths have fallen for six months. Is it temporary or a sign of a corner turned?

The number of fatal drug overdoses nationwide has fallen for six consecutive months. Is this temporary or a sign of a corner turned?
Experts point to Vermont, which has seen a drop in overdose deaths, as model for responding to the addiction crisis.

The number of fatal drug overdoses nationwide has fallen for six consecutive months, fueling hopes that the downturn marks not just a reprieve but a long-lasting shift in the tide of the addiction crisis.

Annual U.S. drug overdoses have been tracking upward for nearly four decades, and the rate of growth increased sharply in the last few years with the onset of the opioid epidemic.

But in the 12-month period ending in March 2018 — the most recent span for which data are available — the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention a decline of 2.8 percent in the number of overdose deaths, to an estimated 71,073 people, compared with the 12

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