articleNew England Journal of MedicineFeb 15, 2017BRONZE OA

Opioid-Prescribing Patterns of Emergency Physicians and Risk of Long-Term Use

Brigham and Women's Hospital · Harvard University · +2 more institutions

PubMed
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Abstract

Background

Increasing overuse of opioids in the United States may be driven in part by physician prescribing. However, the extent to which individual physicians vary in opioid prescribing and the implications of that variation for long-term opioid use and adverse outcomes in patients are unknown.

Methods

We performed a retrospective analysis involving Medicare beneficiaries who had an index emergency department visit in the period from 2008 through 2011 and had not received prescriptions for opioids within 6 months before that visit. After identifying the emergency physicians within a hospital who cared for the patients, we categorized the physicians as being high-intensity or low-intensity opioid prescribers according to relative quartiles of prescribing rates within the same hospital. We compared rates of long-term opioid use, defined as 6 months of days supplied, in the 12 months after a visit to the emergency department among patients treated by high-intensity or low-intensity prescribers, with adjustment for patient characteristics.

Citation impact

568
total citations
FWCI
78.03
Percentile
100%
References
23
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Emergency department
  • Confidence interval
  • Emergency medicine
  • Medical prescription
  • Odds ratio
  • Quartile
  • Opioid
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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