Suicide Prevention & Response Network — Veterans Collaborative

Overdose Prevention & Response


Crisis & Help Lines in Massachusetts

The Massachusetts Behavioral Health Help Line (BHHL) is a clinical hotline staffed by trained providers and peer coaches offering clinical assessment, treatment referrals, and crisis triage. Call or text (833) 733-2445 or chat here.

The Massachusetts Overdose Prevention Helpline is staffed by harm reductionists and people with lived and living experience with overdose. It connects people using drugs to trained operators who can call for help.


Veteran Overdose Deaths in Massachusetts

The Massachusetts Injury Surveillance Program publishes data on drug overdose and poisoning deaths within the state.

Veterans made up 12 percent of the 72,018 Massachusetts residents who experienced one or more of the 133,295 documented nonfatal overdoses from 2013 to 2021 (over 8,640 veterans).

In 2019, the Massachusetts Military and Veteran Drug Overdose Deaths data sheet identified 90 overdose deaths (along with 67 suicide deaths), with most involving multiple substances:

  • 92 percent involved opioids (compared to 15 percent of suicides in 2019);

  • 59 percent had 2–5 substances and 27 percent had more than five substances;

  • 47 percent involved cocaine; and

  • 37 percent involved alcohol (compared to 29 percent of suicides in 2019).

Veterans with fatal overdoses in 2019 were just over age 50 on average––almost 10 years older than non-veterans. Around 43 percent had a known mental health condition (compared to 52 percent of veterans who died by suicide). Veterans who overdosed were more likely to have been diagnosed with PTSD, to have alcohol involved, and to die at home compared to non-veterans.

Massachusetts Military & Veteran Overdose Trends

The only year data has been published specifically about military and veteran fatal overdoses was in 2019, when there were 90 overdose deaths and 67 suicide deaths. Over 8,640 veterans have had a nonfatal overdose from 2013 to 2021. Based on the total number of deaths there have been an average of around 960 nonfatal overdoses a year.

Veterans are significantly more likely to experience fatal and nonfatal overdoses, particularly homeless veterans. There is insufficient data available for communities to implement effective suicide and overdose prevention strategies to mitigate risk factors within the veteran community. The percent of veterans with nonfatal overdoses has been over three times the state average since 2011.

US Military Overdose Trends

US Veteran Overdose Trends

From 2010 to 2019, 42,627 veterans died by overdose (along with the 65,547 veterans who died by suicide during that period). Veterans age 65+ had the largest relative increase in overdose mortality over time. The largest absolute and relative increases in overdose mortality rates during this time were in the Northeast region.

VA researchers found that mortality risk was greater for veterans with opioid use disorder who were not receiving buprenorphine compared to those who did across VA facilities from 2008 to 2017. Veterans without buprenorphine were over four times more likely to die by suicide or overdose, even after accounting for periods with methadone or naltrexone, and had higher all-cause mortality.

Access to Medication for Opioid Use Disorder

Despite strong evidence supporting the use of life-saving pharmacotherapy to treat opioid use disorder, there continue to be high levels of stigma surrounding Medication for Opioid Use Disorder (MOUD) among both patients and clinicians, particularly perpetuating the idea that patients are “substituting one drug for another,” among many other barriers to care.


Risk Factors Involving Medications & Substances

In February 2023, a committee of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine began a VA-sponsored study to evaluate the effects of opioids and benzodiazepines on all-cause mortality in veterans (including suicide) and quantify the effects of opioid and benzodiazepine prescribing on the risk of death among veterans who received VA care between 2007 and 2019.

Statistic: Percentage of U.S. Iraq and Afghanistan veterans with prescribed selected medications for service-related injury as of 2021* | Statista

Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America’s annual survey of 5,174 veterans in 2021 asked if they had been prescribed or were currently taking prescription medications for service-connected injuries.  Many medications can be harmful when used with alcohol or other substances, increasing the risk of serious side effects, unintentional overdose, and death.

In 2023, RAND published A Summary of Veteran-Related Statistics drawing from public nationally representative datasets demonstrating that veterans of all ages were more likely than nonveterans to get treatment for alcohol and substance use.

Only 2.3 percent of post 9/11 and 1.2 percent of pre 9/11 era veterans reported receiving treatment for alcohol or drug use in the past year and 36.5 percent of post 9/11 and 19.9 percent of pre 9/11 era veterans reported binge drinking in the past month.

“Obtaining prompt access to services is critical not only during times of crisis,” the 2023 VA National Suicide Prevention Report notes, “but when first initiating treatment, and in a sustained manner to complete a full episode of care.”



Operation Deep Dive

America’s Warrior Partnership’s Operation Deep Dive™ study currently encompasses five years of death data corroborated by the DoD from Massachusetts and seven other states. OpDD™ acquired state-wide death records for Massachusetts in 2020, which were prepared and delivered to the DoD for Phase I verification.

AWP is seeking relatives, loved ones, friends, and co-workers of former service members who died by suicide or self-injury, including death by overdose, asphyxiation, accidental gunshot, drowning, suicide by law enforcement interaction, or high-speed, single-driver accidents, within the past 24 months for private interviews. Click here for more information.


Veterans Harm Reduction Summit

The Veterans Collaborative and Grunt Style Foundation hosted the first Massachusetts Veterans Harm Reduction Summit on December 11th in collaboration with VFW Department of Massachusetts, Mad in America, HeartCore Collective, Irreverent Warriors and 22Mohawks at Boston Police VFW Post 1018, learning from experts alongside impacted veterans and survivors exploring safe prescribing and deprescribing and reviewing the available public health data involving military and veteran suicide and overdose deaths in Massachusetts and beyond. Check out HARMREDUCTION.vet to learn more.