Difference between revisions of "Reduce Over-Prescription of Prescription Drugs"

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<div class="mw-parser-output"><div class="mw-parser-output">__NOTOC__ <div class="mw-parser-output"><div class="mw-parser-output"><div class="wiki" id="content_view" style="display: block">
=Introductory Paragraph=
Return to the [[Opioid_Top-Level_Strategy_Map|Opioid_Top-Level_Strategy_Map]] or&nbsp;[[ZOOM_MAP_-_Reduce_Prescription_of_Opioids|Zoom Map (Reduce Prescription of Opioids)&nbsp;]]&nbsp;or the [[ZOOM_MAP_-_Reduce_Access_to_Opioids|Zoom Map (Reduce Access to Opioids)]]
<div id="toc">
= Table of Contents =
<div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Evidence|Evidence]]</div> <div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#History|History]]</div> <div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Useful_Statistics|Useful Statistics]]</div> <div style="margin-left: 2em">[[#Useful_Statistics-Prescription_Rates|Prescription Rates]]</div> <div style="margin-left: 2em">[[#Useful_Statistics-Effectiveness|Effectiveness]]</div> <div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Impact_of_Reduction_in_Surgery_Prescribing|Impact of Reduction in Surgery Prescribing]]</div> <div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Promising_Programs|Promising Programs]]</div> <div style="margin-left: 2em">[[#Promising_Programs-Express_Scripts|Express Scripts]]</div> <div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#General_Best_Practices|General Best Practices]]</div> <div style="margin-left: 2em">[[#General_Best_Practices-Limiting_the_Supply_of_Prescription_Opioids_in_Circulation|Limiting the Supply of Prescription Opioids in Circulation]]</div> <div style="margin-left: 2em">[[#General_Best_Practices-Identifying_.26_Treating_Opioid-Dependent_Individuals|Identifying & Treating Opioid-Dependent Individuals]]</div> <div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Tools_.26_Resources|Tools & Resources]]</div> <div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Scorecard_Building|Scorecard Building]]</div> <div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Resources_to_Investigate|Resources to Investigate]]</div> <div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Sources|Sources]]</div> </div>
= Evidence =


States that have cracked down on doctors and pain clinics have seen in a decline in prescriptions and opioid-related deaths.<sup class="reference">[1]</sup>
Reducing prescription of opioids contributes to reducing risk in two major ways. First, it reduces the number of people who are beginning to use prescription opioids for legitimate prescribed reasons but who may begin to develop a dependence on opioids or a strong desire to keep using them when the specific medical need ends. Second, reducing the prescription of opioids will limit the number of excess pills that are often diverted for inappropriate use. Interventions which healthcare providers can implement to limit the supply of prescription opioids in circulation include:
 


= History =
*Decrease supply by changing prescribing practices, reducing both dose and quantity.
*Provide non-opioid alternatives for effective chronic pain management, and work with payers to adequately reimburse for effective pain management modalities.
*Be diligent in follow-up on diversion/prevention opportunities.
*Partner with pharmacists and check their state's Prescription Drug Monitoring Program before prescribing opioids.


'''OxyContin'''<br/> The rate of pain reported by Americans has not changed much over time, and yet the number of painkiller prescriptions has increased 300 percent since 1999.<sup class="reference">[2]</sup> At the same time, the number of deaths due to prescription opioid overdoses has quadrupled.<sup class="reference">[3]</sup> The rise in availability of prescription opioids began with the prescription of OxyContin. OxyContin (oxycodone) was released by Purdue Pharmaceuticals in 1996 and marketed as having a lower abuse potential then other narcotics.<sup class="reference">[4]</sup> This enticed physicians to prescribe the oxycodone-based narcotic for common conditions, such as back aches and knee pain, in addition to the original intended recipients, cancer patients and the terminally ill. By 2010, 1 in every 5 pain related doctor's visits in the United States resulted in a narcotic prescription. Individuals discovered snorting or injecting the powder from crushed OxyContin tablets produces a high similar to heroin and "by 2000, parts of the United States, particularly rural areas, began to see skyrocketing rates of addiction and crime related to use of the drug."<sup class="reference">[5]</sup> Purdue Pharmaceuticals knew the drug had a high potential for abuse, but continued to market it as a time-released drug with low risk of abuse. In 2007, Purdue Pharma plead guilty in federal court to criminal charges for misleading doctors and patients and paid out over $600 million in fines.<sup class="reference">[6]</sup><br/> <br/> "For years the sole focus was on reducing non-medical use, reducing abuse," Dr. Andrew Kolodny, co-founder of Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing. "They were trying to stop kids from getting into grandma's medicine cabinet. Nobody was asking why does every grandma now have opioids in her medicine cabinet." - Searching for Relief: the Opioid Epidemic in the United States.<sup class="reference">[7]</sup><br/> &nbsp;
=Key Information=


= Useful Statistics =
The rate of pain reported by Americans has not changed much over time, and yet the number of painkiller prescriptions has increased 300 percent since 1999. <ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20150905120932/www.drugabuse.gov/about-nida/legislative-activities/testimony-to-congress/2015/americas-addiction-to-opioids-heroin-prescription-drug-abuse</ref> At the same time, the number of deaths due to prescription opioid overdoses has quadrupled. <ref>http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/business/11drug-web.html</ref> The rise in availability of prescription opioids began with the prescription of OxyContin. OxyContin (oxycodone) was released by Purdue Pharmaceuticals in 1996 and marketed as having a lower abuse potential than other narcotics. This enticed physicians to prescribe the oxycodone-based narcotic for common conditions, such as back aches and knee pain, in addition to the original intended recipients, cancer patients and the terminally ill. By 2010, 1 in every 5 pain-related doctor's visits in the United States resulted in a narcotic prescription. It was soon discovered that snorting or injecting the powder from crushed OxyContin tablets produces a high similar to heroin and "by 2000, parts of the United States, particularly rural areas, began to see skyrocketing rates of addiction and crime related to use of the drug." <ref>http://www.planagainstpain.com/resources/usnd/</ref> Purdue Pharmaceuticals knew the drug had a high potential for abuse, but continued to market it as a time-released drug with low risk of abuse. In 2007, Purdue Pharma pleaded guilty in federal court to criminal charges for misleading doctors and patients and paid out over $600 million in fines. According to Dr. Andrew Kolodny, co-founder of Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing, "For years the sole focus was on reducing non-medical use, reducing abuse....They were trying to stop kids from getting into grandma's medicine cabinet. Nobody was asking why does every grandma now have opioids in her medicine cabinet." <ref>Searching for Relief: the Opioid Epidemic in the United States. http://www.planagainstpain.com/resources/usnd/</ref>


*Surgery-related overprescribing results in 3.3 billion unused pills available for misuse<sup class="reference">[8]</sup>
Physicians, dentists, and other healthcare professionals have a key role to play in preventing patients from developing an addiction to pain medication. Studies have shown that it is possible for people to become addicted to such medications in a matter of days. Reducing over-prescribing  is a powerful tool needed to prevent dependence. Prescribing practices could be improved to reduce the prescription of opioids by:
*Middle age women consume the most opioids<sup class="reference">[9]</sup>
* providing better education in US medical schools about pain management, opioid abuse, and addiction
*Surgery is a gateway to persistent opioid use and potential misuse<sup class="reference">[10]</sup>
* modifying regulations on direct advertisements by pharmaceutical companies
*An analysis of Monitoring the Future data found that legitimate use of prescribed opioids before high school graduation was associated with a 33 percent increased risk of future opioid misuse. One reason these results are concerning is that they were concentrated among youth with no previous substance use and with prior disapproval of opioid misuse<sup class="reference">[11]</sup>
* limiting the ways companies influence doctors, such as restricting gifts, vacations, and other forms of compensation.
*Gen X women and knee replacement had the highest rate of persistent opioid use following their operation (22.8%)<sup class="reference">[12]</sup>
*Enough opioids were prescribed in 2016 to provide every American with 36 pills<sup class="reference">[13]</sup>
*Immediate-release opioids are easiest to misuse<sup class="reference">[14]</sup>
*38 percent of U.S. adults were prescribed an opioid in 2015<sup class="reference">[15]</sup>
*An estimated 5 to 8 million Americans use opioids for ongoing management of chronic pain, yet long-term opioid use has become increasingly controversial in light of the current opioid epidemic, the accompanying rise in overdose deaths and addiction rates, as well as little evidence that opioids improve function or speed resolution of the pain.<sup class="reference">[16]</sup>
*Previously the majority of heroin users entering treatment began their misuse with heroin.<sup class="reference">[17]</sup> National-level general population heroin data shows now 80% of new heroin users start off using pain pills. <sup class="reference">[18]</sup>
*One shocking study found that 90% of people who had overdosed on opioids were still able to get a prescription filled.<sup class="reference">[19]</sup>
*The CDC has urged states to make prescription-monitoring programs easier for doctors and pharmacists to use.<sup class="reference">[20]</sup>
*<span style="background-color: #ffffff; font-family: arial,sans-serif; font-size: small"><span style="background-color: #ffffff; font-family: arial,sans-serif; font-size: small">The Johns Hopkins’ Bloomberg School of Public Health released <span style="color: #1155cc; font-family: arial,sans-serif; font-size: small; vertical-align: baseline">[http://www.jhsph.edu/research/centers-and-institutes/center-for-drug-safety-and-effectiveness/opioid-epidemic-town-hall-2015/2015-prescription-opioid-epidemic-report.pdf The Prescription Opioid Epidemic: An Evidence-Based Approach - 2015 (PDF | 547 KB)].</span></span><br/> This 42-page report calls for stricter guidelines on the prescribing and dispensing of powerful pain medications</span>
<br/> Individuals are being prescribed opioids through worker's comp claims:<sup class="reference">[21]</sup><br/> &nbsp; <div style="text-align: center">[[File:Wokers' comp.PNG|Wokers' comp.PNG]]</div>
== Prescription Rates ==


A detailed analysis of opioid prescribing rates show various trends across the country.<sup class="reference">[22]</sup>
'''Insurance Company Practices Contribute to Over-Prescription of Opioids'''
 


*Providers in the highest prescribing counties prescribed 6 times more opioids per person than the lowest prescribing counties in 2015.  
The over-prescription of opioids is largely a result of the US health insurance structure. Unlike countries that provide universal health care funded by state taxes, the United States has a mostly privatized system of care. And experts say insurers are much more likely to pay for a pill than physical therapy or repeat treatments. According to Judith Feinberg of the West Virginia University School of Medicine: “Most insurance, especially for poor people (Medicaid), won't pay for anything but a pill. Say you have a patient that's 45 years old. They have lower back pain, you examine them, they have a muscle spasm. Really the best thing is physical therapy, but no one will pay for that. So, doctors get very ready to pull out the prescription pad. Even if the insurance covers physical therapy, you probably need prior authorization which is a lot of time and paperwork.” <ref> Amanda Erickson (n.d.). Analysis | Opioid abuse in the U.S. is so bad it’s lowering life expectancy. Why hasn’t the epidemic hit other countries? Retrieved November 24, 2019, from Washington Post website: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2017/12/28/opioid-abuse-in-america-is-so-bad-its-lowering-our-life-expectancy-why-hasnt-the-epidemic-hit-other-countries/</ref>
*Half of US counties had a decrease in the amount of opioids (MME*) prescribed per person from 2010 to 2015.  
*The MME prescribed per person in 2015 was about 3 times as high as in 1999.


<br/> ''Characteristics of counties with higher opioid prescribing:''
The US health-care system is different from other countries in other ways, too. There is pressure to address pain, and a pervasive attitude that everything is fixable. As a result, doctors in the United States are much more likely to provide painkillers than doctors in other countries. One comparative study found that Japanese doctors treated acute pain with opioids about half the time. In the United States, the number was 97 percent of the time. <ref>Amanda Erickson (n.d.). Analysis | Opioid abuse in the U.S. is so bad it’s lowering life expectancy. Why hasn’t the epidemic hit other countries? Retrieved November 24, 2019, from Washington Post website: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2017/12/28/opioid-abuse-in-america-is-so-bad-its-lowering-our-life-expectancy-why-hasnt-the-epidemic-hit-other-countries/</ref>


*Small cities or large towns
'''Useful Statistics'''
*Higher percent of white residents
*More dentists and primary care physicians
*More people who are uninsured or unemployed
*More people who have diabetes, arthritis, or disability


&nbsp;
*In 2018, more than 1 in 5 Americans had an opioid prescription filled. <ref>https://www.npr.org/2020/07/17/887590699/doctors-and-dentists-still-flooding-u-s-with-opioid-prescriptions</ref>


== Effectiveness ==
* The US has 5% of the world's population, but consumes 80% of the world's prescription opioids. <ref>https://www.npr.org/2020/07/17/887590699/doctors-and-dentists-still-flooding-u-s-with-opioid-prescriptions</ref>


In a paper published by the National Safety Council, with a focus in looking at prescription opioids, doctors are beginning to prove that prescription opioids are not as strong as the public may seem. The National Safety Council ([http://www.nsc.org/pages/home.aspx nsc.org]) is a nonprofit organization whose mission is to save lives by preventing injuries and deaths at work, in homes and communities, and on the road through leadership, research, education and advocacy.
*Surgery-related overprescribing results in 3.3 billion unused pills available for misuse. <ref>http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/136/5/e1169</ref>
  When digging into whether or not a pain killer is effective or not, doctors look at the ''Number Needed to Treat.'' NNT is the number of people who must be treated by a specific intervention for one person to receive a certain effect. For example, when testing pain medications, the intervention is the dose of pain medication and the effect is usually 50 percent pain relief. Fifty percent relief of pain is considered effective treatment, allowing people increased functional abilities and an improved quality of life (Cochrane. org, 2014). So the question becomes, how many people must be treated with a certain dose of a medication for one person to receive 50 percent pain relief (effective relief)?
  A lower NNT means the medicine is more effective. A product with an NNT of 1 means that the medicine is 100 percent effective at reducing pain by 50 percent - everyone who takes the medicine has effective pain relief. A medicine with an NNT of 2 means one out of two, or 50 percent, of people who take the medicine get effective pain relief. An example of a medicine that would not be a good pain reliever would be one with a NNT equal to 10. In such a case, you would have to treat 10 people for one to receive effective pain relief.
  When comparing opioids versus over the counter pain medicines, we see a steep decline in the NNT. Most would assume that opioids would beat out over the counter pain relievers-- this happens to not be the case. In the paper, doctors state that over the counter pain relievers have a lower NNT than that of opioid pain medication. This can be seen in the diagram below.
  [[File:Screen Shot 2017-05-31 at 3.10.06 PM.png|Screen Shot 2017-05-31 at 3.10.06 PM.png]]
 
  [http://www.nsc.org/RxDrugOverdoseDocuments/Evidence-Efficacy-Pain-Medications.pdf?utm_campaign=Advocacy%20:%20Rx%20Drug%20Overdose&utm_source=hs_automation&utm_medium=email&utm_content=14359125&_hsenc=p2ANqtz--rGDOmg26G3XFqlpBlzTdhUD6HeBCp9sVYabAUNAOTCZ5fNJ3Oi5AeQtO8TjiF0JIE0rVvK6GByIraVOjKP12epF3vxA&_hsmi=14359125 Evidence for the Efficacy of Pain Medications]<sup class="reference">[23]</sup>
 
 


= Impact of Reduction in Surgery Prescribing =
*Previously the majority of heroin users entering treatment began their misuse with heroin. National-level general population heroin data shows that now nearly 80% of new heroin users start off using pain pills. <ref>https://nida.nih.gov/publications/research-reports/prescription-opioids-heroin/prescription-opioid-use-risk-factor-heroin-use#:~:text=Of%20those%20who%20began%20abusing,opioid%20was%20a%20prescription%20drug.&text=Examining%20national%2Dlevel%20general%20population,prescription%20opioids%20prior%20to%20heroin.</ref>


[[File:10 percent reduction in prescribing for surgeries.png|10 percent reduction in prescribing for surgeries.png]]<br/> &nbsp;
*One study found that 90% of people who had overdosed on opioids were still able to get a prescription filled.


= Promising Programs =
*An analysis of Monitoring the Future data found that legitimate use of prescribed opioids before high school graduation was associated with a 33 percent increased risk of future opioid misuse. One reason these results are concerning is that they were concentrated among youth with no previous substance use and with prior disapproval of opioid misuse. <ref>https://www.planagainstpain.com/explore-our-toolkit/2017-national-report/</ref>


== Express Scripts ==
*Middle-age women consume the most opioids. <ref>https://www.planagainstpain.com/explore-our-toolkit/2017-national-report/</ref>


<span style="color: #ff2b00">[https://www.express-scripts.com/index.html Express Scripts]</span> is a prescription benefit plan provider that makes the use of prescription drugs safer and more affordable for it's members. The company now seeks to help curb the prescription of opioids and thus subsequent additions by: engaging prescribers, mobilizing payers, and protecting patients.<br/> <br/> '''Tool''':<br/> Express Scripts developed the Advanced Opioid Management Solution, launched in early June 2017, which is a comprehensive program that works across the care continuum to prevent opioid use and misuse before it happens.<sup class="reference">[24]</sup><br/> This program is uniquely positioned to reach across three critical touchpoints:
*Surgery is a gateway to persistent opioid use and potential misuse. <ref>https://www.planagainstpain.com/explore-our-toolkit/2017-national-report/</ref>


*the pharmacy
'''Prescription Patterns'''
*physicians
*patients


<br/> '''Methods''':
States that have cracked down on doctors and pain clinics have seen in a decline in prescriptions and opioid-related deaths. However, it seems that reducing access to prescription opioids can lead people to steal pills, purchase pills on the black market (which may be fake pills containing Fentanyl) or switch to heroin (which is cheaper, but now often is laced with deadly Fentanyl). One geographic analysis of opioid prescribing rates in 2015 revealed a high variability between counties across the country, with providers in some counties prescribing 6 times more opioids per person than the lowest prescribing counties. The characteristics of counties with higher opioid prescribing rates included:


#Limit first-time users of short-acting opioids to an initial fill of seven days.<sup class="reference">[25]</sup>
*Small cities or large towns
#Enhanced prior authorization also is required for all long-acting opioids to block fills for new users.<sup class="reference">[26]</sup>
*Higher percent of white residents
#Morphine Equivalent Dose (MED) edit program gives visibility to, and requires prior authorization for, members accumulating quantities of opioid medication exceeding 200Mg morphine equivalent dose per day.<sup class="reference">[27]</sup>
*More dentists and primary care physicians  
#Concurrent drug utilization review (CDUR) ensures opioid prescriptions are appropriate, medically necessary and unlikely to result in adverse medical consequences.<sup class="reference">[28]</sup>
*More people who are uninsured or unemployed
#Sends automated messages directly to all opioid-writing physicians at the point of care via their electronic medical record portal to inform them of potential duplicate therapy, misuse and abuse, drug-drug interactions, use of multiple prescribers or pharmacies — or when a patient is approaching MED thresholds.<sup class="reference">[29]</sup>
*More people who have diabetes, arthritis, or disability
#Sends out an educational letter after their first fill to educate them of the serious potential risks of opioid use, safe handling instructions, important restrictions and proper disposal of unused medication.<sup class="reference">[30]</sup>
#Opioid neuroscience specialist pharmacists conduct proactive outreach to patients triggered by one of several scenarios where the PBM’s data signals concerning patterns of use, such as filling two or more different short-acting opioids within the last 30 days.<sup class="reference">[31]</sup>
#Provides disposal bags to first-time opioid users that the system indicates are likely to have leftover medications. The bags include clear instructions for handling and disposal in a member’s home, with no driving or special disposal day required.<sup class="reference">[32]</sup>
#Limits patients to obtaining an opioid prescription from only one doctor and to filling that prescription at only one pharmacy when the fraud, waste and abuse program detects drug-seeking behavior.<sup class="reference">[33]</sup>


<br/> '''Results''':<br/> A recent pilot program in the Express Scripts Lab with more than 100,000 members new to opioids showed:
=Relevant Research=


*38% reduction in hospitalizations<sup class="reference">[34]</sup>
'''National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA).''' This research report, "How can prescription drug misuse be prevented?" highlights the different roles that physicians, their patients, and pharmacists can play in identifying and preventing non-medical use of prescription drugs. <ref>https://nida.nih.gov/publications/research-reports/misuse-prescription-drugs/how-can-prescription-drug-misuse-be-prevented</ref>
*40% drop in emergency room visits in the intervention group versus the control group during six months of follow-up<sup class="reference">[35]</sup>
*A subset receive the educational letter who had high-risk patterns of opioid us also received a counseling call showed a 19% decrease in the day’s supply of opioid dispensing during six months of follow up<sup class="reference">[36]</sup>  


<br/> '''[https://www.cdc.gov/drugoverdose/pdmp/ Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs (PDMPs)]''' - State-run electronic databases should be used to track the prescribing and dispensing of controlled prescription drugs to patients. PDMPs are now available in 49 states. This program can give a physician or pharmacist critical information regarding a patient’s controlled substance prescription history. This information can help physicians, pharmacists or someone prescribing opioids, identify patients at high-risk who would benefit from early interventions.<sup class="reference">[37]</sup><br/> <br/> '''Prescriber Report Card Programs'''
'''The National Safety Council (NSC)''' is a nonprofit organization whose mission is to save lives by preventing injuries and deaths at work, in homes and communities, and on the road. It does this through leadership, research, education, and advocacy. <ref>http://www.nsc.org/pages/home.aspx nsc.org</ref> In this NSC paper, prescription opioids are shown to be less effective than they may seem to the public. <ref>https://www.nsc.org/getmedia/8ecdc0e5-ae58-43e8-b98b-46c205e1c2b2/evidence-efficacy-pain-medications.pdf</ref> When evaluating whether or not a pain killer is effective or not, doctors look at the Number Needed to Treat (NNT) - the number of people who must be treated by a specific intervention for one person to receive a certain effect. For example, when testing pain medications, the intervention is the dose of pain medication and the effect is usually 50 percent pain relief. Fifty percent relief of pain is considered effective treatment, allowing people increased functional abilities and an improved quality of life. So the question becomes, how many people must be treated with a certain dose of a medication for one person to receive 50 percent pain relief (effective relief)? A lower NNT means the medicine is more effective. A product with an NNT of 1 means that the medicine is 100 percent effective at reducing pain by 50 percent - everyone who takes the medicine has effective pain relief. A medicine with an NNT of 2 means one out of two, or 50 percent, of people who take the medicine get effective pain relief. An example of a medicine that would not be a good pain reliever would be one with a NNT equal to 10. In such a case, you would have to treat 10 people for one to receive effective pain relief.  When comparing opioids versus over the counter pain medicines, we see a steep decline in the NNT. Most would assume that opioids would beat out over the counter pain relievers-- this happens to not be the case. In the paper, doctors state that over the counter pain relievers have a lower NNT than that of opioid pain medication.


*''Arizona -'' quarterly report cards are prepared and distributed by the state's Prescription Drug Monitoring Program. Each card details a provider’s prescribing history, including their ranking compared to the “average” prescriber of the same specialty and a summary or graphical representation of their prescribing history. The Arizona PDMP saw evidence that more prescribers were querying the PDMP and adjusted their prescribing habits after Arizona PDMP began issuing prescriber report cards. In Pinal County, for example, the percentage of prescribers meeting the “outlier” criteria for total dosage units fell 26 percent, and prescriber PDMP usage increased 14 percent in just one year.<sup class="reference">[38]</sup>
=Impactful Federal, State, and Local Policies=
*''Kentucky -'' prescription data is configured to count the number of prescriptions and dosage units dispensed for the previous 90 days. Data categories on the report card include (a) the average for all Kentucky prescribers, (b) the average for prescribers within the selected specialty, and (c) the number for the requesting prescriber. Under consideration for enhancements to the report are the inclusion of the number of dosage units per prescription, morphine milligram equivalent (MME) calculations for a patient, and comparisons by a specific medication.<sup class="reference">[39]</sup>
*''Ohio -'' In 2015 Ohio PDMP created a 'Practice Insight Report' providing a brief summary to each provider of their prescribing patterns. This report card included 4 different sections: 1) top 25 patients by number of other prescribers visited in past 12 months, 2) Top 25 patients by active cumulative morphine equivalent (ACME) (Ohio’s acronym for MME), 3) Top 10 medications prescribed in the previous 12 months for the prescriber’s entire practice, 4) A listing of the prescriber’s patients issued a controlled substances prescription in the previous 12 months.
*''West Virginia -'' doctors are going to to be ranked based on how much they prescribe opioids<sup class="reference">[40]</sup>


<br/> '''[https://www.communitycarenc.org/population-management/chronic-pain-project/ Project Lazarus]''' - A community-wide response to managing pain with lots of resources. ''One problem that patients and doctors both face is insurance coverage for non-opioid pain treatments. Options such as physical therapy, acupuncture, chiropractic care, and steroid injections, often have little to no coverage from insurers. Even when physicians are trying to reduce opioid prescriptions, insurance companies a thwarting the effort. In addition, for many who have been taking opioids for years to manage pain, alternative therapies are often not as effective, and there has been little research in finding an effective, non-addictive drug alternative to opioids''.<sup class="reference">[41]</sup><br/> <br/> '''Saliva Drug Screening''' – For multiple reasons, a saliva sample should be chosen over the more common urine sample to test for drugs present in the system.<sup class="reference">[42]</sup><sup class="reference">[43]</sup> Unlike urine, saliva tests cannot be adulterated, it can be administered rapidly, it has the ability to test for many things, it shows the metabolite drug and is cost-effective in the long run.<sup class="reference">[44]</sup> Some healthcare systems may consider cost an issue, but saliva tests are billed to the same code. <span style="color: #ff0000">[citation needed]</span><br/> ''Contact'': John Cribbs (john@nodrugsneeded.com)<br/> <br/> '''DEA Diversion Control Program (DCP)''' - This program is responsible for regulating and controlling more than 1.6 million DEA registrants involved in manufacturing, distributing, prescribing, and dispensing controlled prescription drugs (CPDs). DEA’s Diversion Control efforts are geared toward preventing the non-medical use of CPDs by providing education and training within the pharmaceutical and medical communities and pursuing those practitioners who are operating outside of reasonable medical standards. <sup class="reference">[45]</sup><br/> <br/> '''[https://labtestsonline.org/understanding/analytes/pharmacogenetic-tests/ Pharmacogenetics Test]''' -At $350 per test and only needed once in your life, this is a cost effective approach to ensure that patients receive an appropriate dose of pain medication.<sup class="reference">[46]</sup><br/> ''Contact'': John Cribbs (john@nodrugsneeded.com)<br/> <br/> '''[https://www.shatterproof.org/advocacy/state-by-state-information/prescriber-education Prescriber Education] -''' Physicians who prescribe opioid painkillers should receive training on the risks of overusing immediate release, extended-release, and long-acting formulations of pain medications. This training should be tied to the recently released ''CDC Guideline for Prescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain''.<sup class="reference">[47]</sup>
'''DEA Diversion Control Program (DCP)''' is responsible for regulating and controlling more than 1.6 million DEA registrants involved in manufacturing, distributing, prescribing, and dispensing controlled prescription drugs. DEA’s Diversion Control efforts are geared toward preventing the non-medical use of controlled prescription drugs by providing education and training within the pharmaceutical and medical communities and pursuing those practitioners who are operating outside of reasonable medical standards.  


= General Best Practices =
'''The National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL)''' is a nonpartisan public association that was established in 1975. <ref>https://www.ncsl.org/</ref> Its membership includes sitting state legislators. NCSL published "Prescribing Policies: States Confront Opioid Overdose Epidemic." <ref>https://www.legis.iowa.gov/docs/publications/SD/864399.pdf</ref> NCSL publishes regular legislative research updates. For example, a search on their online database using the keyword "opioids" revealed a national summary -- in the 2023 legislative session, 103 laws were enacted related to fentanyl. <ref>https://www.ncsl.org/state-legislatures-news/details/to-combat-overdose-crisis-states-bring-tough-new-laws-to-fight-against-fentanyl</ref>


Possible interventions by Healthcare Providers include:<sup class="reference">[48]</sup>
=Available Tools & Resources=
 


== Limiting the Supply of Prescription Opioids in Circulation ==
'''SAFE Project.''' See the wiki titled "Expand and Enhance Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs (PDMPs)" for more detailed information on improving PDMPs which are among the most promising state-level interventions to improve opioid prescribing, inform clinical practice, and protect patients at risk.<ref>https://www.yoursafesolutions.us/wiki/Expand_and_Enhance_Prescription_Drug_Monitoring_Programs_(PDMPs)</ref>
 
*Decrease supply by changing prescribing practices, reducing both dose and quantity.
*Provide non-opioid alternatives for effective chronic pain management, and work with payers to adequately reimburse for effective pain management modalities.  
*Be diligent in follow-up on diversion/prevention opportunities.  
*Partner with pharmacists and check their state's Prescription Drug Monitoring Program before prescribing opioids.  


== Identifying & Treating Opioid-Dependent Individuals ==
'''The US Department of Health & Human Services''' provides a series of articles within its website for "Help & Resources for the National Opioid Crisis." <ref>https://www.hhs.gov/opioids/index.html</ref>


*Learn to recognize the signs of Opioid Use Disorder, which can be found on the wiki page [[Improve_Treatment_&_Enable_Recovery_for_People_with_SUDs|Improve Treatment & Enable Recovery for People with SUDs]]
'''Grants.gov''' provides a searchable database of grant and funding opportunities. <ref>https://www.grants.gov/</ref>
*Actively manage and taper opioid use among individuals who are not benefiting from continued opioid therapy and who may be exhibiting concerning behaviors. More information regarding this can be found on the wiki page [[Improve_&_Expand_Screening_&_Testing_for_Misuse|Improve & Expand Screening & Testing for Misuse]]
*Educate patients about treatments that help address chronic pain management.  
*Provide ongoing, comprehensive addiction treatment, including [[Expand_Access_to_Medication-Assisted_Treatment|Medication-Assisted-Treatment]] and behavioral support (With regulatory changes and increased funding options, more providers can be trained to treat this chronic condition just as they have been trained to treat other chronic conditions).  


&nbsp;
'''Advanced Opioid Management''' is a program that was launched in 2017 by Express Scripts, a prescription benefit plan provider. <ref>https://www.express-scripts.com/index.html</ref> They offer a comprehensive program that works across the care continuum to prevent opioid use and misuse by reach reaching three critical touch points -- the pharmacy, physicians, and patients. Some aspects of the program include:


= Tools & Resources =
*Limit first-time users of short-acting opioids to an initial fill of seven days.<ref>https://aishealth.mmitnetwork.com/</ref>
*Require enhanced prior authorization for all long-acting opioids to block fills for new users.<ref>https://aishealth.mmitnetwork.com/</ref>
*Morphine Equivalent Dose (MED) edit program gives visibility to, and requires prior authorization for, members accumulating quantities of opioid medication exceeding 200Mg MED per day.<ref>https://aishealth.mmitnetwork.com/</ref>
*Concurrent drug utilization review (CDUR) ensures opioid prescriptions are appropriate, medically necessary, and unlikely to result in adverse medical consequences.
*Sends automated messages directly to all opioid-writing physicians at the point of care via their electronic medical record portal to inform them of potential duplicate therapy, misuse and abuse, drug-drug interactions, use of multiple prescribers or pharmacies — or when a patient is approaching MED thresholds.<ref>https://aishealth.mmitnetwork.com/</ref>
*Sends out an educational letter after their first fill to educate them of the serious potential risks of opioid use, safe handling instructions, important restrictions and proper disposal of unused medication.
*Opioid neuroscience specialist pharmacists conduct proactive outreach to patients triggered by one of several scenarios where the data signals concerning patterns of use, such as filling two or more different short-acting opioids within the last 30 days.
*Provides disposal bags to first-time opioid users whom the system indicates are likely to have leftover medications. The bags include clear instructions for handling and disposal in a member’s home, with no driving or special disposal day required.
*Limits patients to obtaining an opioid prescription from only one doctor and to filling that prescription at only one pharmacy when the fraud, waste and abuse program detects drug-seeking behavior.<ref>https://aishealth.mmitnetwork.com/</ref>


[[TR_-_Reduce_Prescription_of_Opioids|TR - Reduce Prescription of Opioids]]<br/> &nbsp;
One pilot program with more than 100,000 members showed:


= Scorecard Building =
*38% reduction in hospitalizations <ref>https://www.justice.gov/usao/file/895091/download</ref>
*40% drop in emergency room visits during six months of follow-up
*Follow-up counseling calls showed a 19% decrease in the day’s supply of opioid dispensing <ref>https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/hospital-physician-relationships/w-va-to-measure-rank-physicians-on-opioid-prescribing.html</ref>


[[PO_-_Reduce_Prescription_of_Opioids|Potential Objective Details]]<br/> [[PM_-_Reduce_Prescription_of_Opioids|Potential Measures and Data Sources]]<br/> [[PA_-_Reduce_Prescription_of_Opioids|Potential Actions and Partners]]
=Promising Practices=


= Resources to Investigate =
'''Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs (PDMPs)''' can give a physician or pharmacist critical information regarding a patient’s controlled substance prescription history. This information can help identify patients at high-risk who would benefit from early interventions. The CDC recommends that state-run electronic databases should be used to track the prescribing and dispensing of controlled prescription drugs to patients. <ref>https://www.cdc.gov/drugoverdose/pdmp/</ref> While PDMPs are now available in all 50 states, requirements vary from state to state. <ref> https://www.aanp.org/advocacy/advocacy-resource/policy-briefs/issues-at-a-glance-prescription-drug-monitoring-programs-pdmp</ref> See SAFE Solutions article on PDMPS for more information. <ref>https://www.yoursafesolutions.us/wiki/Expand_and_Enhance_Prescription_Drug_Monitoring_Program_(PDMP)</ref>


[[RTI_-_Reduce_Opioid_Prescriptions_for_Women_of_Reproductive_Age|More RTI on Reducing Prescription of Opioids]]<br/> <br/> <span style="background-color: #ffffff; color: #222222; font-family: arial,sans-serif; font-size: 12.8px">'''<span style="color: #4d4d4d">PAGE MANAGER</span>:''' </span><span style="background-color: #ffffff; color: #ff0000; font-family: arial,sans-serif; font-size: 12.8px">[insert name here]</span><br/> <span style="background-color: #ffffff; color: #222222; font-family: arial,sans-serif; font-size: 12.8px">'''<span style="color: #4d4d4d">SUBJECT MATTER EXPERT</span>''': </span><span style="background-color: #ffffff; color: #ff0000; font-family: arial,sans-serif; font-size: 12.8px">[fill out table below]</span>
*Arizona - quarterly report cards are prepared and distributed by the state's PDMP. Each card details a provider’s prescribing history, including their ranking compared to the “average” prescriber of the same specialty and a summary or graphical representation of their prescribing history. The Arizona PDMP saw evidence that more prescribers were querying the PDMP and adjusted their prescribing habits after Arizona PDMP began issuing prescriber report cards. In Pinal County, for example, the percentage of prescribers meeting the “outlier” criteria for total dosage units fell 26 percent, and prescriber PDMP usage increased 14 percent in just one year.


{| class="wiki_table"
*Kentucky  prescription data is configured to count the number of prescriptions and dosage units dispensed for the previous 90 days. Data categories on the report card include (a) the average for all Kentucky prescribers, (b) the average for prescribers within the selected specialty, and (c) the number for the requesting prescriber. Under consideration for enhancements to the report are the inclusion of the number of dosage units per prescription, morphine milligram equivalent (MME) calculations for a patient, and comparisons by a specific medication.
|-
| '''Reviewer'''
| '''Date'''
| '''Comments'''
|-
| &nbsp;
| &nbsp;
| &nbsp;
|}


= Sources =
*Ohio's PDMP created a "Practice Insight Report" providing a brief summary to each provider of their prescribing patterns. This report card included 4 different sections: (a) top 25 patients by number of other prescribers visited in past 12 months, (b) top 25 patients by  MME, (c) top 10 medications prescribed in the previous 12 months for the prescriber’s entire practice, and (d) a listing of the prescriber’s patients issued a controlled substances prescription in the previous 12 months. Ohio also developed the "safety checkpoints" approach to minimize inappropriate prescriptions but still allow people who need them to be able to get them--with some added precautions. <ref>https://www.pharmacy.ohio.gov/Documents/Pubs/Newsletter/2019/State%20Board%20Newsletter%20(February%202019).pdf</ref>


----
*West Virginia doctors are ranked based on how much they prescribe.


#[http://www.latimes.com/science/sciencenow/la-sci-sn-opioid-prescriptions-20170706-story.html [1]]
==Sources==
#U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, “Press Release: Prescription painkiller overdoses at epidemic levels,” November 1, 2011, www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2011/ p1101_flu_pain_killer_overdose.html.
#Nora D. Volkow, “America’s Addiction to Opioids: Heroin and Prescription Drug Abuse,” National Institute on Drug Abuse, May 14, 2014, www.drugabuse.gov/about-nida/ legislative-activities/testimony-to-congress/2015/americas- addiction-to-opioids-heroin-prescription-drug-abuse.
#Pokrovnichka, Anjelina. "History of Oxycontin: Labeling and Risk Management Program."
#Meier, Barry. "In Guilty Plea, OxyContin Maker to Pay $600 Million." ''The New York Times''. The New York Times, 09 May 2007. Web. 01 Feb. 2017. <[http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/business/11drug-web.html [2]]>.
#Meier, Barry. "In Guilty Plea, OxyContin Maker to Pay $600 Million." ''The New York Times''. The New York Times, 09 May 2007. Web. 01 Feb. 2017. <[http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/business/11drug-web.html [3]]>.
#[https://www.drugrehab.com/opioid-epidemic/ [4]]
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##
##*
##**
##***
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#[http://www.planagainstpain.com/resources/usnd/ [9]]
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#[http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/2015-opioids-survey_us_597fbf42e4b08e1430051bd1?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign= [12]]<u>TheMorningEmail</u>080117&utm_content=<u>TheMorningEmail</u>080117+CID_aab2173fd55d83c6c55bbc305653daee&utm_source=Email+marketing+software&utm_term=Reuters&ncid=newsltushpmgnews<u>TheMorningEmail</u>080117
#National Institutes of Health, “Pathways to Prevention Workshop: the Role of Opioids in the Treatment of Chronic Pain,” September 29–30, 2014, prevention. nih.gov/docs/programs/p2p/ODPPainPanelStatement Final_10-02-14.pdf.
#[https://www.drugabuse.gov/publications/research-reports/relationship-between-prescription-drug-heroin-abuse/prescription-opioid-use-risk-factor-heroin-use [13]]
#[https://www.drugabuse.gov/publications/research-reports/relationship-between-prescription-drug-heroin-abuse/prescription-opioid-use-risk-factor-heroin-use [14]]
#[http://www.latimes.com/science/sciencenow/la-sci-sn-opioid-overdose-new-prescriptions-20121228-story.html [15]]
#[http://www.cbsnews.com/news/heroin-use-rising-among-women-and-wealthy/ [16]]
#[http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2016/01/20/462922517/opioid-abuse-takes-a-toll-on-workers-and-their-employers [17]]
#[https://www.cdc.gov/vitalsigns/opioids/index.html [18]]
#[http://safety.nsc.org/e1t/c/*W6CHc0S1bs90mW5pT6S629r1ky0/*W5Wm51M29Q9W7W3c2kqN3Dpbm_0/5/f18dQhb0S82-9dsQYMW8gpJQQ4mQf6dW4WJlYv5v_Sk4W3hHhdL5zh-NRVp3s9r7s5LskW8TyWk78TzqkrW4PQc0q2LFGHLW30TPxY54WFDnW5nDKL98W1PGmW3r3nBD31H9sVW4hz-Fq1SPxGDW1BMbsb1WwbdJW32q5tY5mG4wFW3CRqwb1YycPYW83_Pyq834DLzW8XWrn35rp7Y0W30sdJJ36tN1gMX-DyYVw63gN60kSQkZTmcZW4DqHqz6dgmw3W4yqK9Q4C-8H8W6gGQPz7F0yWMW81MffF7sLfzkN4W9-mlHMtq4VvBBZq1tBsMLW1s-GnB6HBHnDW6qG7343c41hBW7c9Y-_7lbxYdW76642w718dPTW1kk6RR7dgC7QW7n16Xd22R_v1W7l-z6Z7FTLlDW7n-lrS7sbXk9W7MHjJF7brZwzW1CtFTd7s945bW1vfNMV7vcKw0W6yvxtq2kV0jMW7CKBGl7wWTJRVFk2JC63VwclW34Zlnj3kYc04W4p7yDT2zz89mN5wL512Vy7F8W24DKvM3J3WSWVSd58l5q55vCW7mtWSc6kk_8HW8Jc99_3k-J7dW2Q8FtZ87ShD1W27h-j23_1-KkN8Mbtl5cYJKQW7dJ18n3PQ5gzf5n2LtT04 Evidence for the Efficacy of Pain Medications]<br/> [http://www.nsc.org/RxDrugOverdoseDocuments/Evidence-Efficacy-Pain-Medications.pdf?utm_campaign=Advocacy%20:%20Rx%20Drug%20Overdose&utm_source=hs_automation&utm_medium=email&utm_content=14359125&_hsenc=p2ANqtz--rGDOmg26G3XFqlpBlzTdhUD6HeBCp9sVYabAUNAOTCZ5fNJ3Oi5AeQtO8TjiF0JIE0rVvK6GByIraVOjKP12epF3vxA&_hsmi=14359125 [19]]
#[https://aishealth.com/archive/ndbn081117-04?utm_source=Real%20Magnet&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=115985453 [20]]
#[https://aishealth.com/archive/ndbn081117-04?utm_source=Real%20Magnet&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=115985453 [21]]
#[https://aishealth.com/archive/ndbn081117-04?utm_source=Real%20Magnet&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=115985453 [22]]
#[https://aishealth.com/archive/ndbn081117-04?utm_source=Real%20Magnet&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=115985453 [23]]
#[https://aishealth.com/archive/ndbn081117-04?utm_source=Real%20Magnet&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=115985453 [24]]
#[https://aishealth.com/archive/ndbn081117-04?utm_source=Real%20Magnet&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=115985453 [25]]
#[https://aishealth.com/archive/ndbn081117-04?utm_source=Real%20Magnet&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=115985453 [26]]
#[https://aishealth.com/archive/ndbn081117-04?utm_source=Real%20Magnet&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=115985453 [27]]
#[https://aishealth.com/archive/ndbn081117-04?utm_source=Real%20Magnet&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=115985453 [28]]
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#[https://aishealth.com/archive/ndbn081117-04?utm_source=Real%20Magnet&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=115985453 [32]]
#[https://www.cdc.gov/drugoverdose/pdmp/ [33]]
#[https://www.justice.gov/usao/file/895091/download [34]]
#[http://www.pdmpassist.org/pdf/Report_Card_TAG_20160315_final.pdf [35]]
#[http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/hospital-physician-relationships/w-va-to-measure-rank-physicians-on-opioid-prescribing.html [36]]
#[http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20160611/MAGAZINE/306119965?utm_source=modernhealthcare&utm_medium=email&utm_content=20160611-MAGAZINE-306119965&utm_campaign=am [37]]
#Kintz P, Samyn N. Use of alternative specimens: drugs of abuse in saliva and doping agents in hair. ''Ther Drug Monit.'' 2002;24(2):239-246.
#Choo RE, Huestis MA. Oral fluid as a diagnostic tool. ''Clin Chem Lab Med.'' 2004;42(11):1273-1287.
#[http://forensicfluids.com/oral-v-urine/#turnaround [38]]
#[https://www.drugabuse.gov/publications/research-reports/relationship-between-prescription-drug-heroin-abuse/prescription-opioid-use-risk-factor-heroin-use [39]]
#[http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/842715_2 [40]]
#[https://www.shatterproof.org/advocacy/federal-initiatives/prescription-drug-monitoring-programs [41]]
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</div> </div> </div> </div> </div>
[[Category:Pages with broken file links]]

Latest revision as of 10:42, 24 November 2024

Introductory Paragraph

Reducing prescription of opioids contributes to reducing risk in two major ways. First, it reduces the number of people who are beginning to use prescription opioids for legitimate prescribed reasons but who may begin to develop a dependence on opioids or a strong desire to keep using them when the specific medical need ends. Second, reducing the prescription of opioids will limit the number of excess pills that are often diverted for inappropriate use. Interventions which healthcare providers can implement to limit the supply of prescription opioids in circulation include:

  • Decrease supply by changing prescribing practices, reducing both dose and quantity.
  • Provide non-opioid alternatives for effective chronic pain management, and work with payers to adequately reimburse for effective pain management modalities.
  • Be diligent in follow-up on diversion/prevention opportunities.
  • Partner with pharmacists and check their state's Prescription Drug Monitoring Program before prescribing opioids.

Key Information

The rate of pain reported by Americans has not changed much over time, and yet the number of painkiller prescriptions has increased 300 percent since 1999. [1] At the same time, the number of deaths due to prescription opioid overdoses has quadrupled. [2] The rise in availability of prescription opioids began with the prescription of OxyContin. OxyContin (oxycodone) was released by Purdue Pharmaceuticals in 1996 and marketed as having a lower abuse potential than other narcotics. This enticed physicians to prescribe the oxycodone-based narcotic for common conditions, such as back aches and knee pain, in addition to the original intended recipients, cancer patients and the terminally ill. By 2010, 1 in every 5 pain-related doctor's visits in the United States resulted in a narcotic prescription. It was soon discovered that snorting or injecting the powder from crushed OxyContin tablets produces a high similar to heroin and "by 2000, parts of the United States, particularly rural areas, began to see skyrocketing rates of addiction and crime related to use of the drug." [3] Purdue Pharmaceuticals knew the drug had a high potential for abuse, but continued to market it as a time-released drug with low risk of abuse. In 2007, Purdue Pharma pleaded guilty in federal court to criminal charges for misleading doctors and patients and paid out over $600 million in fines. According to Dr. Andrew Kolodny, co-founder of Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing, "For years the sole focus was on reducing non-medical use, reducing abuse....They were trying to stop kids from getting into grandma's medicine cabinet. Nobody was asking why does every grandma now have opioids in her medicine cabinet." [4]

Physicians, dentists, and other healthcare professionals have a key role to play in preventing patients from developing an addiction to pain medication. Studies have shown that it is possible for people to become addicted to such medications in a matter of days. Reducing over-prescribing is a powerful tool needed to prevent dependence. Prescribing practices could be improved to reduce the prescription of opioids by:

  • providing better education in US medical schools about pain management, opioid abuse, and addiction
  • modifying regulations on direct advertisements by pharmaceutical companies
  • limiting the ways companies influence doctors, such as restricting gifts, vacations, and other forms of compensation.

Insurance Company Practices Contribute to Over-Prescription of Opioids

The over-prescription of opioids is largely a result of the US health insurance structure. Unlike countries that provide universal health care funded by state taxes, the United States has a mostly privatized system of care. And experts say insurers are much more likely to pay for a pill than physical therapy or repeat treatments. According to Judith Feinberg of the West Virginia University School of Medicine: “Most insurance, especially for poor people (Medicaid), won't pay for anything but a pill. Say you have a patient that's 45 years old. They have lower back pain, you examine them, they have a muscle spasm. Really the best thing is physical therapy, but no one will pay for that. So, doctors get very ready to pull out the prescription pad. Even if the insurance covers physical therapy, you probably need prior authorization which is a lot of time and paperwork.” [5]

The US health-care system is different from other countries in other ways, too. There is pressure to address pain, and a pervasive attitude that everything is fixable. As a result, doctors in the United States are much more likely to provide painkillers than doctors in other countries. One comparative study found that Japanese doctors treated acute pain with opioids about half the time. In the United States, the number was 97 percent of the time. [6]

Useful Statistics

  • In 2018, more than 1 in 5 Americans had an opioid prescription filled. [7]
  • The US has 5% of the world's population, but consumes 80% of the world's prescription opioids. [8]
  • Surgery-related overprescribing results in 3.3 billion unused pills available for misuse. [9]
  • Previously the majority of heroin users entering treatment began their misuse with heroin. National-level general population heroin data shows that now nearly 80% of new heroin users start off using pain pills. [10]
  • One study found that 90% of people who had overdosed on opioids were still able to get a prescription filled.
  • An analysis of Monitoring the Future data found that legitimate use of prescribed opioids before high school graduation was associated with a 33 percent increased risk of future opioid misuse. One reason these results are concerning is that they were concentrated among youth with no previous substance use and with prior disapproval of opioid misuse. [11]
  • Middle-age women consume the most opioids. [12]
  • Surgery is a gateway to persistent opioid use and potential misuse. [13]

Prescription Patterns

States that have cracked down on doctors and pain clinics have seen in a decline in prescriptions and opioid-related deaths. However, it seems that reducing access to prescription opioids can lead people to steal pills, purchase pills on the black market (which may be fake pills containing Fentanyl) or switch to heroin (which is cheaper, but now often is laced with deadly Fentanyl). One geographic analysis of opioid prescribing rates in 2015 revealed a high variability between counties across the country, with providers in some counties prescribing 6 times more opioids per person than the lowest prescribing counties. The characteristics of counties with higher opioid prescribing rates included:

  • Small cities or large towns
  • Higher percent of white residents
  • More dentists and primary care physicians
  • More people who are uninsured or unemployed
  • More people who have diabetes, arthritis, or disability

Relevant Research

National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA). This research report, "How can prescription drug misuse be prevented?" highlights the different roles that physicians, their patients, and pharmacists can play in identifying and preventing non-medical use of prescription drugs. [14]

The National Safety Council (NSC) is a nonprofit organization whose mission is to save lives by preventing injuries and deaths at work, in homes and communities, and on the road. It does this through leadership, research, education, and advocacy. [15] In this NSC paper, prescription opioids are shown to be less effective than they may seem to the public. [16] When evaluating whether or not a pain killer is effective or not, doctors look at the Number Needed to Treat (NNT) - the number of people who must be treated by a specific intervention for one person to receive a certain effect. For example, when testing pain medications, the intervention is the dose of pain medication and the effect is usually 50 percent pain relief. Fifty percent relief of pain is considered effective treatment, allowing people increased functional abilities and an improved quality of life. So the question becomes, how many people must be treated with a certain dose of a medication for one person to receive 50 percent pain relief (effective relief)? A lower NNT means the medicine is more effective. A product with an NNT of 1 means that the medicine is 100 percent effective at reducing pain by 50 percent - everyone who takes the medicine has effective pain relief. A medicine with an NNT of 2 means one out of two, or 50 percent, of people who take the medicine get effective pain relief. An example of a medicine that would not be a good pain reliever would be one with a NNT equal to 10. In such a case, you would have to treat 10 people for one to receive effective pain relief. When comparing opioids versus over the counter pain medicines, we see a steep decline in the NNT. Most would assume that opioids would beat out over the counter pain relievers-- this happens to not be the case. In the paper, doctors state that over the counter pain relievers have a lower NNT than that of opioid pain medication.

Impactful Federal, State, and Local Policies

DEA Diversion Control Program (DCP) is responsible for regulating and controlling more than 1.6 million DEA registrants involved in manufacturing, distributing, prescribing, and dispensing controlled prescription drugs. DEA’s Diversion Control efforts are geared toward preventing the non-medical use of controlled prescription drugs by providing education and training within the pharmaceutical and medical communities and pursuing those practitioners who are operating outside of reasonable medical standards.

The National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) is a nonpartisan public association that was established in 1975. [17] Its membership includes sitting state legislators. NCSL published "Prescribing Policies: States Confront Opioid Overdose Epidemic." [18] NCSL publishes regular legislative research updates. For example, a search on their online database using the keyword "opioids" revealed a national summary -- in the 2023 legislative session, 103 laws were enacted related to fentanyl. [19]

Available Tools & Resources

SAFE Project. See the wiki titled "Expand and Enhance Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs (PDMPs)" for more detailed information on improving PDMPs which are among the most promising state-level interventions to improve opioid prescribing, inform clinical practice, and protect patients at risk.[20]

The US Department of Health & Human Services provides a series of articles within its website for "Help & Resources for the National Opioid Crisis." [21]

Grants.gov provides a searchable database of grant and funding opportunities. [22]

Advanced Opioid Management is a program that was launched in 2017 by Express Scripts, a prescription benefit plan provider. [23] They offer a comprehensive program that works across the care continuum to prevent opioid use and misuse by reach reaching three critical touch points -- the pharmacy, physicians, and patients. Some aspects of the program include:

  • Limit first-time users of short-acting opioids to an initial fill of seven days.[24]
  • Require enhanced prior authorization for all long-acting opioids to block fills for new users.[25]
  • Morphine Equivalent Dose (MED) edit program gives visibility to, and requires prior authorization for, members accumulating quantities of opioid medication exceeding 200Mg MED per day.[26]
  • Concurrent drug utilization review (CDUR) ensures opioid prescriptions are appropriate, medically necessary, and unlikely to result in adverse medical consequences.
  • Sends automated messages directly to all opioid-writing physicians at the point of care via their electronic medical record portal to inform them of potential duplicate therapy, misuse and abuse, drug-drug interactions, use of multiple prescribers or pharmacies — or when a patient is approaching MED thresholds.[27]
  • Sends out an educational letter after their first fill to educate them of the serious potential risks of opioid use, safe handling instructions, important restrictions and proper disposal of unused medication.
  • Opioid neuroscience specialist pharmacists conduct proactive outreach to patients triggered by one of several scenarios where the data signals concerning patterns of use, such as filling two or more different short-acting opioids within the last 30 days.
  • Provides disposal bags to first-time opioid users whom the system indicates are likely to have leftover medications. The bags include clear instructions for handling and disposal in a member’s home, with no driving or special disposal day required.
  • Limits patients to obtaining an opioid prescription from only one doctor and to filling that prescription at only one pharmacy when the fraud, waste and abuse program detects drug-seeking behavior.[28]

One pilot program with more than 100,000 members showed:

  • 38% reduction in hospitalizations [29]
  • 40% drop in emergency room visits during six months of follow-up
  • Follow-up counseling calls showed a 19% decrease in the day’s supply of opioid dispensing [30]

Promising Practices

Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs (PDMPs) can give a physician or pharmacist critical information regarding a patient’s controlled substance prescription history. This information can help identify patients at high-risk who would benefit from early interventions. The CDC recommends that state-run electronic databases should be used to track the prescribing and dispensing of controlled prescription drugs to patients. [31] While PDMPs are now available in all 50 states, requirements vary from state to state. [32] See SAFE Solutions article on PDMPS for more information. [33]

  • Arizona - quarterly report cards are prepared and distributed by the state's PDMP. Each card details a provider’s prescribing history, including their ranking compared to the “average” prescriber of the same specialty and a summary or graphical representation of their prescribing history. The Arizona PDMP saw evidence that more prescribers were querying the PDMP and adjusted their prescribing habits after Arizona PDMP began issuing prescriber report cards. In Pinal County, for example, the percentage of prescribers meeting the “outlier” criteria for total dosage units fell 26 percent, and prescriber PDMP usage increased 14 percent in just one year.
  • Kentucky prescription data is configured to count the number of prescriptions and dosage units dispensed for the previous 90 days. Data categories on the report card include (a) the average for all Kentucky prescribers, (b) the average for prescribers within the selected specialty, and (c) the number for the requesting prescriber. Under consideration for enhancements to the report are the inclusion of the number of dosage units per prescription, morphine milligram equivalent (MME) calculations for a patient, and comparisons by a specific medication.
  • Ohio's PDMP created a "Practice Insight Report" providing a brief summary to each provider of their prescribing patterns. This report card included 4 different sections: (a) top 25 patients by number of other prescribers visited in past 12 months, (b) top 25 patients by MME, (c) top 10 medications prescribed in the previous 12 months for the prescriber’s entire practice, and (d) a listing of the prescriber’s patients issued a controlled substances prescription in the previous 12 months. Ohio also developed the "safety checkpoints" approach to minimize inappropriate prescriptions but still allow people who need them to be able to get them--with some added precautions. [34]
  • West Virginia doctors are ranked based on how much they prescribe.

Sources

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  6. Amanda Erickson (n.d.). Analysis | Opioid abuse in the U.S. is so bad it’s lowering life expectancy. Why hasn’t the epidemic hit other countries? Retrieved November 24, 2019, from Washington Post website: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2017/12/28/opioid-abuse-in-america-is-so-bad-its-lowering-our-life-expectancy-why-hasnt-the-epidemic-hit-other-countries/
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