Poisoning Statistics, 2023 National Data

How many people call Poison Control each year?

In 2023, the 55 US poison control centers (Poison Control) provided telephone guidance for nearly 2.1 million human poison exposures. That's about: 

  • 6.2 poison exposures/1,000 population.
  • 32.1 poison exposures in children younger than 6 years/1,000 children.
  • 1 poison exposure reported to US poison control centers every 15 seconds.

Table 1. 2023 Poison Control Telephone Call Case Types

Year: 2023

Calls

Human Exposures

2,080,659

Animal Exposures

41,857

Confirmed Nonexposures

5,071

Info Calls

293,663

TOTAL CASES

2,127,587

How old are the people who Poison Control helps?

While children younger than 6 years comprise a disproportionate percentage of the cases, poisoning affects ALL age groups, from infants to seniors. Peak poisoning frequency occurs in one- and two-year-olds, but poisonings in teens and adults are more serious. Notice that the greater proportion of males in poison exposures occurring in children younger than 13 years switches to a female predominance in teens and adults.
 
fig 1
In 2023, across all ages, there were 623 poison exposures reported per 100,000 population. The highest incidence occurred in children 2 years and younger (5,330 exposures per 100,000 population). For teens, 585 exposures per 100,000 population were reported.

Table 2. Comparison of age groups as percent of human exposures reported to poison control vs. percent of the US population.

Age Group

% Managed by Poison Control

% of US Population

Infants & Toddlers (0-2y)

28%

3%

Young Children (3-5y)

12%

3%

Children & Tweens (6-12y)

7%

9%

Teens (13-19y)

9%

9%

Adult 20s

9%

13%

Adult 30s

8%

14%

Adult 40s

6%

12%

Adult 50s

5%

12%

Adult 60s

5%

12%

Adult 70y+

5%

12%

 fig 2

In 2023, children and teens comprised 56% of all human exposures, followed by adults ages 20-69 years (33%). Older adults (70 years and older) comprised 5% of all human exposures reported to poison control.
 fig 3

Are most poisonings intentional?

Across all ages, 77.2% of poison exposures reported to US poison centers in 2023 were unintentional, 18.4% were intentional, and 2.5% were adverse reactions. In children younger than 6 years, 99% of exposures were unintentional, compared to only 33% of teen exposures and 62% of adult exposures.

Table 3. Reason for Human Exposure Cases as Percent of All Cases by Age Group, 2023

Child <13

Teen 13-19y

Adult >20y

All Ages

Adverse Reaction

Adverse reaction - Drug

0%

1%

3%

2%

Adverse reaction - Food

0%

0%

0%

0%

Adverse reaction - Other

0%

0%

1%

0%

Subtotal, Adverse Reaction

1%

2%

5%

3%

Intentional

Intentional - Abuse

0%

6%

4%

2%

Intentional - Misuse

1%

5%

4%

3%

Intentional - Suspected suicide

1%

49%

19%

13%

Intentional - Unknown

0%

2%

1%

1%

Subtotal, Intentional

2%

62%

27%

18%

Other

Other - Contamination / tampering

0%

0%

1%

0%

Other - Malicious

0%

0%

1%

0%

Other - Withdrawal

0%

0%

0%

0%

Subtotal, Other

0%

1%

2%

1%

Unintentional

Unintentional - Bite / sting

1%

1%

2%

2%

Unintentional - Environmental

1%

2%

4%

3%

Unintentional - Food poisoning

0%

1%

1%

1%

Unintentional - General

82%

9%

13%

45%

Unintentional - Misuse

2%

8%

15%

9%

Unintentional - Occupational

0%

1%

3%

2%

Unintentional - Therapeutic error

10%

12%

25%

17%

Unintentional - Unknown

0%

0%

0%

0%

Subtotal, Unintentional

97%

33%

65%

77%

Unknown Reason

Unknown Reason

0%

1%

2%

1%

Subtotal, Unknown Reason

0%

1%

2%

1%

 

What are the most common substances implicated in poison exposures?

Pediatric

Cleaning substances and pain medications lead the list of the most common substances implicated in pediatric exposures in 2023. Cosmetics and personal care products followed. These exposures are nearly always unintentional.

Table 4.

Substance Category

No. Cases

%

Cleaning Substances (Household)

87,031

10.1

Analgesics

78,993

9.1

Cosmetics/Personal Care Products

78,721

9.1

Foreign Bodies/Toys/Miscellaneous

69,513

8.0

Dietary Supplements/Herbals/Homeopathic

59,575

6.9

Antihistamines

40,924

4.7

Vitamins

40,343

4.7

Topical Preparations

33,739

3.9

Pesticides

29,541

3.4

Plants

28,770

3.3

 

Adult

In 2023, pain medications (analgesics) continued to lead the list of the most common substances implicated in adult poison exposures. Cardiovascular drugs, antidepressants, and sedatives/sleeping medications followed.

Table 5.

Substance Category

No. Cases

%

Analgesics

134,924

10.9

Cardiovascular Drugs

92,078

7.4

Antidepressants

91,679

7.4

Sedative/Hypnotics/Antipsychotics

88,503

7.1

Cleaning Substances (Household)

76,069

6.1

Alcohols

54,062

4.4

Anticonvulsants

47,744

3.8

Antihistamines

45,426

3.7

Hormones and Hormone Antagonists

42,408

3.4

Stimulants and Street Drugs

38,536

3.1

What substances cause the most serious poisonings?

Between 2019 and 2024, pain medications were the most frequent causes of pediatric fatalities reported to Poison Control, followed by fumes, gases, and vapors such as carbon monoxide. 

Table 6.

Substance category

No. of Fatal Cases

% of Fatal Cases

Analgesics

81

23.9

Fumes/Gases/Vapors

47

13.4

Stimulants and Street Drugs

24

7.1

Batteries

22

6.5

Unknown Drug

19

5.6

Cardiovascular Drugs

14

4.1

Cold and Cough Preparations

14

4.1

Alcohols

13

3.8

Chemicals

9

2.7

Antihistamines

8

2.4

Other/Unknown Nondrug Substances

8

2.4

In 2023, the substance categories with the largest number of deaths across all ages (and including intentional exposures) include Acetaminophen, Sedative/Hypnotics/Antipsychotics, Miscellaneous Alcohols, Pharmaceutical and Illegal Opioid Preparations, and Miscellaneous Stimulants and Street Drugs.

Table 7.

Substance category

No. of Fatal Cases

% of Fatal Cases

Acetaminophen Alone

360

8.8

Miscellaneous Sedative/Hypnotics/Antipsychotics

308

7.5

Miscellaneous Alcohols

306

7.5

Pharmaceutical and Illegal Opioid Preparations

260

6.4

Miscellaneous Stimulants and Street Drugs

240

5.9

Miscellaneous Unknown Drug

226

5.5

Calcium Antagonist

205

5.0

Beta Blockers

152

3.7

Miscellaneous Antidepressants

131

3.2

Hypoglycemic, Single Agent

118

2.9

How serious are poison exposures?

In 2023, 83% of poison exposures reported to US poison centers were nontoxic, minimally toxic, or had at most a minor effect. (Includes the National Poison Data System codes: no effect; minor effect; not followed, nontoxic; and not followed, minimally toxic.)

Figure 4. Outcomes of US Human Poison Exposure Cases, 2023



Intentional exposures were significantly more serious, with nearly seven times as many serious outcomes (major or fatal effects) compared to unintentional exposures. Of the intentional exposures, 8.5% were major effects or deaths compared to just 0.3% of unintentional exposures and 2% of all exposures.

 fig 5

Exposures in teens and adults were also considerably more serious, with 21% of teens and 17% of adults having a moderate, major or fatal effect compared to 1.5% of children younger than 6 years. Most exposures in children younger than 6 years (95%) were nontoxic, minimally toxic, or had at most a minor effect.
 
fig 6

Many poison exposures can be safely observed at home without an ER visit. Overall, 66.5% of poison exposures were observed without medical intervention in 2023. For poison exposures occurring in children younger than 6 years, 85.2% were only observed at home (without going to an ER or seeing a physician). In contrast, only 55.3% of adult cases were managed at the exposure site without medical intervention.
 fig 7

These nontoxic or minimally toxic poison exposures that can be safely observed at home are the cases that will most likely be amenable to triage by webPOISONCONTROL.

Real-Time Poison Exposure Data Enables Surveillance

US poison centers collect data in real time and upload those data approximately every 5 minutes (median time to upload). Real-time data are used to find hazardous products quickly, follow substance abuse trends, and detect chem/bioterrorism incidents. Under a grant from the CDC, America’s Poison Centers and its member poison centers conduct automated, continuous surveillance of poison exposure cases. Alerts are sent when there are an unexpectedly large number of cases in an hour, when there’s an unexpectedly high frequency of a specific symptom, or when there are cases with combinations of clinical effects suggestive of specific poisonings that might require a rapid public health response. Toxicologists promptly investigate these alerts and inform public health officials if outliers are suspicious for events or products of concern.

APC Data Disclosure Statement

Related Links

Summary of Poison Statistics for the Washington, DC region

Summary of National Poison Statistics, Reports to US Poison Centers, 2021

Summary of National Poison Statistics, Reports to US Poison Centers, 2019

Summary of National Poison Statistics, Reports to US Poison Centers, 2018

Summary of National Poison Statistics, Reports to US Poison Centers, 2017

Summary of National Poison Statistics, Reports to US Poison Centers, 2016

Summary of National Poison Statistics, Reports to US Poison Centers, 2015

Summary of National Poison Statistics, Reports to US Poison Centers, 2014

The Rise of Medicine in the Home: Implications for Today's Children, SafeKids Worldwide, March 2016

Medicine Safety for Children: An In-Depth Look at Calls to Poison Centers, SafeKids Worldwide, March 2015

Keeping Families Safe Around Medicine, SafeKids Worldwide, March 2014

References

Gummin DD, Mowry JB, Beuhler MC, Spyker DA, Bronstein AC, Rivers LJ, Pham NPT, Weber J. 2020 Annual Report of the American Association of Poison Control Centers' National Poison Data System (NPDS): 38th Annual Report. Clin Toxicol (Phila). 2021 Dec;59(12):1282-1501. doi: 10.1080/15563650.2021.1989785. PMID: 34890263.

WISQARS.CDC.gov; EXPLORE FATAL INJURY DATA VISUALIZATION TOOL. Year Range: 2020; Unintentional All Injury Deaths; Sex: Both Sexes; Age Range: All Ages; Race: All Races; Ethnicity: All Ethnicities; All Injury Types; All Counties; All States

United States, Congress, National Center for Health Statistics, et al. "Drug Poisoning Deaths in the United States, 1980–2008." Drug Poisoning Deaths in the United States, 1980–2008, U.S. Department Of Health And Human Services, Dec. 2011.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Drug Overdose Deaths in the U.S. Top 100,000 Annually

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Understanding Drug Overdoses and Deaths

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Annual Surveillance Report of Drug-Related Risks and Outcomes — United States, 2017. Surveillance Special Report 1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Published August 31, 2017. https://www.cdc.gov/drugoverdose/pdf/pubs/2017­cdc-drug-surveillance-report.pdf.

Ciccarone, D. Editorial: Fentanyl in the US heroin supply: a rapidly changing risk environment.International Journal of Drug Policy. 2017;46:107–111.

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