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Effects of state opioid prescribing cap laws on opioid prescribing after surgery

Authors :
Ian Schmid
Elizabeth A. Stuart
Alexander D. McCourt
Kayla N. Tormohlen
Elizabeth M. Stone
Corey S. Davis
Mark C. Bicket
Emma E. McGinty
Source :
Health Services Research. 57:1154-1164
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Wiley, 2022.

Abstract

To evaluate the effects of state opioid prescribing cap laws on opioid prescribing after surgery.OptumLabs Data Warehouse administrative claims data covering all 50 states from July 2012 through June 2019.We included individuals from 20 states that had implemented prescribing cap laws without exemptions for postsurgical pain by June 2019 and individuals from 16 control states plus the District of Columbia. We used a difference-in-differences approach accounting for differential timing in law implementation across states to estimate the effects of state prescribing cap laws on postsurgical prescribing of opioids. Outcome measures included filling an opioid prescription within 30 days after surgery; filling opioid prescriptions of specific doses or durations; and the number, days' supply, daily dose, and pill quantity of opioid prescriptions. To assess the validity of the parallel counterfactual trends assumption, we examined differences in outcome trends between law-implementing and control states in the years preceding law implementation using an equivalence testing framework.We included the first surgery in the study period for opioid-naïve individuals undergoing one of eight common surgical procedures.State prescribing cap laws were associated with 0.109 lower days' supply of postsurgical opioids on the log scale (95% Confidence Interval [CI]: -0.139, -0.080) but were not associated with the number (Average treatment effect on the treated [ATT]: -0.011; 95% CI: -0.043, 0.021) or daily dose of postsurgical opioid prescriptions (ATT: -0.013; 95% CI: -0.030, 0.005). The negative association observed between prescribing cap laws and the probability of filling a postsurgical opioid prescription (ATT: -0.041; 95% CI: -0.054, -0.028) was likely spurious, given differences between law-implementing and control states in the pre-law period.Prescribing cap laws appear to have minimal effects on postsurgical opioid prescribing.

Details

ISSN :
14756773 and 00179124
Volume :
57
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Health Services Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0ee541c5bb39c838374b609687c44c23
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6773.14023