After assessing the brutal toll of a nationwide opioid addiction crisis for the better part of a decade, we have been fortunate to note in recent years that the crisis seems to be abating across the country and here in Western Massachusetts.
In 2024, we wrote about “seizing a glimmer of hope” as annual fatal opioid overdoses decreased in America, Massachusetts and Berkshire County.
A year later, as those numbers continued moving in a hopeful direction in Massachusetts, we expressed cautious optimism that the glimmer of hope was a light at the tunnel signaling a genuine downward trend in the epidemic that, at its peak, stole more than 100,000 American lives every year.
Now, with the state Department of Public Health’s release of 2025 opioid overdose numbers, our optimism is a bit less tempered. Just like the previous year, our commonwealth last year saw the lowest number of fatal opioid-related ODs since 2013, the first time since then that this statewide figure has dropped below 1,000 for an entire year. According to DPH data, the 978 opioid fatalities in Massachusetts last year marked a massive 27 percent drop from the same measurement in 2024 — a vast improvement for a region hit hard by a deadly addiction epidemic spurred by the rise of potent synthetic opioids.
From a certain perspective it might seem morbid to celebrate that “only” hundreds of Bay Staters died last year in the throes of a scourge that has devastated all corners of the country. As we’ve noted before, every death is a tragedy — but the increasingly robust trend in reducing opioid deaths by hundreds per year represents a miracle many times over.
Just as the contributing factors to the opioid epidemic have been multivariate, so too are the factors now mitigating it. Still, two things are reasonable to conclude: The reduction in opioid ODs is not just a blip in the data, and myriad harm reduction efforts that might have been unthinkable before this opioid crisis have helped to solidify that hopeful trend.
As America unfortunately finds less and less common ground and bipartisan agreement these days, one big exception has been an increasingly common acceptance that the arrest-and-incarcerate approach epitomized by the “war on drugs,” now recognized as dubious even in past applications, was never going to seriously address this contemporary crisis. It was much harder to moralize and reductively heap blame on marginalized communities when it became clear the opioid epidemic was ravaging all ages, races and classes in urban and rural areas alike across red and blue states.
While it’s a shame it took years of enduring that nationwide crisis to realize addiction is more of a public health problem than a personal moral failing, the silver lining is that we have learned that hard lesson — and the harm reduction efforts that advocates have fought for over many years have finally seen life-saving application. At the turn of the 21st century, it would have been unthinkable to place naloxone-filled modules on street corners or see a drug-testing service pop up at the county’s biggest hospital. But it’s measures like those that seem to have made a difference and put a serious dent in these OD figures: hometown heroes at local police departments and EMS squads upgrading their training and equipment; health care providers meeting a pressing new community mission; advocates who have tirelessly spotlighted previously invisible suffering so that we might take the necessary collective action.
None of that has been easy, from small towns’ increased investment in modern emergency response to navigating a sea change in social attitudes and public policies. Yet every time we see these numbers move in the right direction — an indicator of precious lives saved and families spared unimaginable pain — it’s a sign that our communities and our commonwealth are doing some things right in the face of an immense challenge to our public health and our collective conscience. The difference in opioid fatalities from 2024 to 2025 is the sum of hope — a resource we so need right now.