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ANZ journal of surgery · Oct 2019
Opioid prescribing improvement in orthopaedic specialty unit in a tertiary hospital: a retrospective audit of hospital discharge data pre- and post-intervention for better opioid prescribing practice.
- Beata Stanley, Aidan Jackson, Amanda Norman, Lisa Collins, Anthony Bonomo, and Yvonne Bonomo.
- Department of Addiction Medicine, St Vincent's Hospital Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
- ANZ J Surg. 2019 Oct 1; 89 (10): 1302-1307.
BackgroundThis study aimed to investigate the effects of an intervention focusing on better opioid prescription practice in a tertiary metropolitan hospital orthopaedic unit.MethodsFollowing a previous audit of opioid prescribing in the orthopaedics unit, an intervention comprising the (i) Expert Advisory Group oversight of opioid prescribing, (ii) development of a prescription opioid guideline for various hospital contexts and (iii) a series of education sessions was undertaken to improve opioid prescription practice. A re-audit was subsequently carried out to determine whether the intervention had had an impact on the previously audited orthopaedic unit.ResultsEach audit period was 6 months. There were 281 orthopaedic patients in the original audit (1 January 2017-30 June 2017) and 289 in the re-audit (1 March 2018-31 August 2018). In both audits, a high proportion of patients were discharged to the community on opioids, 82.2% (n = 231) pre-intervention and 79.6% (n = 230) post-intervention. Statistically significant differences in opioid prescribing were found between audits, including: a reduction in the number of patients discharged on combination opioids from 71.4% to 45.7% (P < 0.001), a reduction in the provision of full pharmaceutical quantities of opioid on discharge from 29.4% to 6.1% (P < 0.001) and an increase in opioid weaning plans included in discharge summaries from 6.9% to 87.4% (P < 0.001).ConclusionRaised awareness across the organization and education for staff more than halved the post-operative opioid prescription levels. This highlights the capacity for change in hospitals and the ability to work towards safer prescribing of post-operative opioid therapy.© 2019 Royal Australasian College of Surgeons.
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