More than 2,300 Marylanders died from drug overdoses last year, an increase of about 5% from the year before, health officials said.

The number of Marylanders who died after taking a fatal dose of fentanyl, the synthetic version of heroin, jumped by 17 percent last year, according to the 2018 annual report by the Maryland Department of Health.

State health officials say cocaine related deaths went up last year by 30 percent. The report found that almost all of the cocaine related deaths came from the users taking fatal doses of cocaine laced with fentanyl.

Last year, about 2,100 people died from drug overdoses that were related to opioids.

Steve Schuh, the Executive Director of the Opioid Operational Command Center says that the highest number of overdose deaths were reported in Anne Arundel County, Baltimore City, and Baltimore County.

“Since Governor Hogan declared a state of emergency in response to the opioid crisis in March 2017, Maryland has made tremendous progress in implementing prevention and educational programs, stepping up enforcement, and expanding treatment and recovery programs throughout the state,”Schuh said in a statement. “The Opioid Operational Command Center monitors more than 200 performance measures pertaining to programs and best practices, and, as you will see in this report, virtually all of those measures are moving in a positive direction.”