MANCHESTER, N.H. —

A new study, released Tuesday by the New Hampshire Fiscal Policy Institute, shows that drug-related deaths in New Hampshire dropped to their lowest level in more than a decade.

In 2024, 287 Granite Staters died from drug-related causes, according to the study. That's down from a peak of 490 deaths in 2017. 83.6% of the drug-related deaths in New Hampshire last year involved opioids.

Drug-related deaths declined by 33.4% between 2023 and 2024, marking the sharpest single-year decline in at least a decade, the study found. In 2015, New Hampshire had the second highest drug-related fatality rate in the U.S. By 2024, that rate had fallen to the lowest in New England and below the national average.

The study also noted a surge in funding for prevention, treatment and reco

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