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Journal Article

Citation

Pomerleau AC, Nelson LS, Hoppe JA, Salzman M, Weiss PS, Perrone J. Pain Med. 2017; 18(5): 889–897.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Oxford University Press)

DOI

10.1093/pm/pnw032

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

OBJECTIVE. Emergency department (ED) providers are high volume but low quantity prescribers of opioid analgesics (OA). Few studies have examined differences in opioid prescribing decisions specifically among ED providers. The aim of this study was to describe OA prescribing decisions of ED providers at geographically diverse centers, including utilization of prescribing guidelines and prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMP).

METHODS. This was a multi-center cross-sectional Web-based survey of ED providers who prescribe OA. Respondents were asked about their OA prescribing decisions, their use of PDMPs, and their use of prescribing guidelines. Data was analyzed using descriptive statistics and chi-square tests of association were used to assess the relationship between providers' opioid prescribing decisions and independent covariates.

RESULTS. The total survey population was 957 individuals and 515 responded to the survey for an overall response rate of 54%. The frequency of respondents who prescribed different types of pain medication was variable between centers. Fifty-nine percent (219/369) of respondents were registered to access a PDMP, and 5% (18/369) were not aware whether their state had a PDMP. Forty percent (172/426) of respondents used OA prescribing guidelines, while 24% (103/426) did not, and 35% (151/426) were unaware of prescribing guidelines. Sixteen percent (68/439) of respondents indicated they have prescribed OA to expedite patient discharge, and 12% (54/439) to improve patient satisfaction. No significant differences in OA prescribing decisions were found between groups either by use of PDMP or by guideline adherence.

CONCLUSIONS. In this multi-center survey study of ED clinicians, OA prescribing decisions varied between centers and found some providers occasionally prescribe OA for non-medical reasons including expediting ED discharge and increasing patient satisfaction. The utilization of prescribing guidelines and PDMPs was not associated with differences in OA prescribing decisions.


Language: en

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