More than 16,000 died in 2014 alone from heroin and opioid drug abuse. Nearly half a million people that year were addicted to heroin.

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Drug Enforcement Administration reported that the number of heroin overdose deaths more than tripled and deaths from opioid drugs such as fentanyl almost doubled between 2010-2014 in the United States.
Drug overdoses now kill more Americans than car crashes. More than 16,000 died in 2014 alone from heroin and opioid drug abuse. Nearly half a million people that year were addicted to heroin. Heroin and opioid abuse are related.
Addiction to an opioid drug such as Oxycodone, Hydrocodone and Methadone -- three drugs most commonly involved in overdoses -- can lead to heroin addiction when the prescription painkiller is no longer available.
Officials say the phenomenon is fueling drug-related violence and crime.
According to the Centers for Disease Control, heroin-related deaths have risen most acutely in the US Midwest -- a region encompassing states such as Illinois, Michigan, and Wisconsin.
The state is home to House Speaker Paul Ryan, a Republican who will play a key role in deciding the fate of Obama's funding request.
Addicts often have trouble getting into treatment programs, according to officials, because there are too few of them.
When treatment is available, patients often struggle with costs because health insurance programs offer no coverage or inadequate coverage.
Bradley Wentlandt, police chief in the Milwaukee suburb of Greenfield, spoke of one family that lost their retirement savings and took out two mortgages on their home to pay for their son's treatment.
"He started at age 16 when a friend shared a single Vicodin pill," Wentlandt said.
Source-AFP
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