The Association of Broadband Internet Use With Drug Overdose Mortality Rates in the United States: Cross-Sectional Analysis

Author:

Karakis IoannisORCID,Kostandini GentiORCID,Tsamakis KonstantinosORCID,Zahirovic-Herbert VelmaORCID

Abstract

Background The availability and use of broadband internet play an increasingly important role in health care and public health. Objective This study examined the associations between broadband internet availability and use with drug overdose deaths in the United States. Methods We linked 2019 county-level drug overdose death data in restricted-access multiple causes of death files from the National Vital Statistics System at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention with the 2019 county-level broadband internet rollout data from the Federal Communications Commission and the 2019 county-level broadband usage data available from Microsoft’s Airband Initiative. Cross-sectional analysis was performed with the fixed-effects regression method to assess the association of broadband internet availability and usage with opioid overdose deaths. Our model also controlled for county-level socioeconomic characteristics and county-level health policy variables. Results Overall, a 1% increase in broadband internet use was linked with a 1.2% increase in overall drug overdose deaths. No significant association was observed for broadband internet availability. Although similar positive associations were found for both male and female populations, the association varied across different age subgroups. The positive association on overall drug overdose deaths was the greatest among Hispanic and Non-Hispanic White populations. Conclusions Broadband internet use was positively associated with increased drug overdose deaths among the overall US population and some subpopulations, even after controlling for broadband availability, sociodemographic characteristics, unemployment, and median household income.

Publisher

JMIR Publications Inc.

Reference24 articles.

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4. TurciosYDigital access: a super determinant of healthSubstance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration202303222024-06-07https://www.samhsa.gov/blog/digital-access-super-determinant-health#1

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