Going the wrong way: Colorado’s fentanyl deaths rise while the rest of the nation falls
By Shaina Cole | Contributing Writer, Rocky Mountain Voice
While much of the country is finally beginning to turn the corner on fentanyl, Colorado is heading in the opposite direction. And the human cost is staggering.
Colorado’s numbers are still moving up—synthetic opioid deaths have climbed 17 percent since December 2024. Elsewhere, the trend has started to turn. Across the country, overdose deaths have dropped 26.9 percent, according to the CDC, the steepest one-year decline of the crisis and the lowest levels since 2019.
Colorado isn’t just behind. It stands apart.
A March 2026 report from the Common Sense Institute puts that gap into focus: 1,620 excess deaths.
In other words, that’s how many more Coloradans died from synthetic opioid overdoses between ...

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