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Awareness of State Legislation on Naloxone Accessibility associated with Willingness to Prescribe Naloxone

Authors :
Okoro, Olihe N.
Bastianelli, Karen M.
Wen, Ya-Feng
Bilden, Elisabeth F.
Konowalchuk, Brian K.
Schneiderhan, Mark E.
Source :
Substance Abuse; January 2018, Vol. 39 Issue: 1 p14-20, 7p
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background Increasing rates of opioid-related deaths, state naloxone legislation changes, and negativity prompted investigation of predictive factors associated with willingness to prescribe naloxone to populations at risk of overdose, including knowledge of risk factors, assessment of persons at risk, awareness of legislative changes, perceptions of professional responsibility, and confidence around naloxone prescribing and distribution.Methods Cross-sectional, Web-based, anonymous, voluntary survey to prescribers of 2 regional health care systems serving urban and rural North Dakota, northern Minnesota, and northwestern Wisconsin. Human subject research was approved by university and health care systems’ institutional review boards.Results Overall, 203 of 1586 prescribers responded; however, not all prescribers completed each survey item. A majority (89.4%, n= 127/142) of respondents had never prescribed naloxone for overdose prevention. Willingness to prescribe naloxone for 4 patient care scenarios involving substantial opioid overdose risk ranged from 43.4% to 70.5%. Knowledge mean score was 15.5 (SD = 2.9) out of 22 with median 15 (range: 5–22). Naloxone legislation awareness score was 8.8 (SD = 3.8) out of 15 with median 8 (range: 3–15). There was a statistically significant but modest correlation between willingness to prescribe naloxone and the other variables, including awareness of state naloxone-related legislation (r= 0.43, P< .0001), level of self-confidence about dosing, prescribing, and writing protocols for naloxone (r= 0.37, P< .0001), general knowledge (r= 0.24, P= .0032), and perception of professional responsibility (r= 0.19, P= .03). Multivariate regression analysis indicated willingness to prescribe naloxone was associated with statistically significant predictors, including awareness of the naloxone laws (P= .0016) and self-confidence about dosing, prescribing, and writing protocols (P= .0011).Conclusions Prescribers who are more aware of state laws regarding naloxone and confident in their knowledge of dosing, administration, and writing protocols may be more willing to prescribe naloxone.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08897077 and 15470164
Volume :
39
Issue :
1
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Substance Abuse
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs63070858
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/08897077.2017.1356787