"The 2018 National Drug Threat Assessment (NDTA)1
is a comprehensive strategic assessment
of the threat posed to the United States by domestic and international drug trafficking and the
abuse of illicit drugs. The report combines federal, state, local, and tribal law enforcement
reporting; public health data; open source reporting; and intelligence from other government
agencies to determine which substances and criminal organizations represent the greatest
threat to the United States.
Illicit drugs, as well as the transnational and domestic criminal organizations who traffic them,
continue to represent significant threats to public health, law enforcement, and national security
in the United States. Drug poisoning deaths are the leading cause of injury death in the United
States; they are currently at their highest ever recorded level and, every year since 2011,
have outnumbered deaths by firearms, motor vehicle crashes, suicide, and homicide. In 2016,
approximately 174 people died every day from drug poisoning (see Figure 1). The opioid threat
(controlled prescription drugs, synthetic opioids, and heroin) has reached epidemic levels and
currently shows no signs of abating, affecting large portions of the United States. Meanwhile,
as the ongoing opioid crisis justly receives national attention, the methamphetamine threat
remains prevalent; the cocaine threat has rebounded; new psychoactive substances (NPS) are
still challenging; and the domestic marijuana situation continues to evolve..."
Drug threat assessment
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