1. Opioid prescribing in the emergency department of a tertiary hospital: A retrospective audit of hospital discharge data.
- Author
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Stanley, Beata, Collins, Lisa J, Norman, Amanda F, Karro, Jonathon, Jung, Monica, and Bonomo, Yvonne A
- Subjects
PREVENTION of epidemics ,THERAPEUTIC use of narcotics ,ANALGESICS ,AUDITING ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DRUG interactions ,DRUG prescribing ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,MEDICAL referrals ,MEDICAL prescriptions ,OPIOID abuse ,PUBLIC health ,RESEARCH funding ,PAIN management ,PHYSICIAN practice patterns ,DISCHARGE planning ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,TERTIARY care - Abstract
Objective: EDs are a common source of prescription opioids on discharge. We explored opioid prescribing practices in an ED at a tertiary hospital in Victoria, Australia. Methods: A retrospective audit over a 6 month period of patients discharged from the ED to the community with the maximum allowable quantities of prescription opioids. Results: There was a total of 3301 patient‐episodes discharged with a prescription from the ED. Of these, 766 (23.2%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 21.8–24.6) were prescribed opioids, with over half discharged with the maximum allowable quantities of prescription opioids. Immediate‐release opioids were prescribed in 362 (85.8%, 95% CI 82.5–89.1) patient‐episodes, a combination of immediate‐release and slow‐release preparations were prescribed in 29 (6.9%, 95% CI 4.5–9.3) and 31 (7.3%, 95% CI 4.8–9.8) were prescribed as slow‐release opioids alone. Co‐prescription of other analgesia with opioids occurred in 152 (36.0%, 95% CI 31.4–40.6) patient‐episodes. Possible drug interactions between opioids and other medications were noted in 117 (27.7%, 95% CI 23.4–32.0) patient‐episodes. Discharge summaries were prepared for 360 (85.3%, 95% CI 81.9–88.7) patient‐episodes, but only 171 (40.5%, 95% CI 35.8–45.2) included a plan to address the opioids, be that an opioid‐weaning regimen, analgesia review or referral to a pain specialist on discharge. Conclusion: Opioid prescribing was common in this ED, with almost one‐quarter of discharge prescriptions being for a prescription opioid. This audit highlights potential areas for practice improvement including review of the quantity of opioid tablets prescribed as well as an opioid plan on discharge from the ED. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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