• J. Surg. Res. · Nov 2019

    Effect of Surgery-Specific Opioid-Prescribing Education in a Safety-Net Hospital.

    • Brian K Yorkgitis, Cole Paffett, Gabriel A Brat, and Marie Crandall.
    • Department of Surgery, University of Florida College of Medicine-Jacksonville, Jacksonville, Florida. Electronic address: Brian.yorkgitis2@jax.ufl.edu.
    • J. Surg. Res. 2019 Nov 1; 243: 71-74.

    BackgroundAs the nation works to improve the opioid epidemic, safer opioid prescribing is needed. Prescriber education is one method to assist with this aim. To gauge current surgical residents' opioid prescribing practices at a safety-net hospital, an evaluation was completed before a general surgery-specific opioid prescribing education (OPE) session. The effectiveness of this OPE was measured through a postparticipation evaluation.MethodsA voluntary, anonymous evaluation immediately before and after a one-hour OPE session was performed at an urban safety-net hospital. Descriptive statistics and Student's t-test comparisons of means were performed to analyze the results.ResultsTwenty-three residents completed the surveys. Eleven (47.8%) completed prior OPE with the most common modality being online (7, 63.6%). No participant performed an opioid risk assessment before prescribing opioids. More than half of the residents (14, 60.9%) never used the prescription drug monitoring program. Less than 1/3 (7, 30.4%) used preoperative gabinoids (gabapentin or pregabalin) for elective surgeries. Only two residents provided information on unused opioid disposal. After the OPE, the participants were more likely to prescribe preoperative gabinoids (7 versus 21, P < 0.001). The mean opioid pills prescribed for laparoscopic cholecystectomy, open inguinal hernia repair, laparoscopic ventral hernia repair, and laparoscopic appendectomy were reduced by 2.6 (14.2%, P = 0.23), 3.7 (18.9%, P = 0.07), 2.6 (13.1%, P = 0.23), and 1.1 (7.3%, P = 0.60) pills, respectively.ConclusionA short OPE delivered to surgical residents at a safety-net hospital significantly improved the use of preoperative gabinoids. Although the pill count reductions after the OPE were not statistically significant, there was a consistent reduction in amount of opiates prescribed after the OPE. However, clinical significance is important, as a reduction in any amount of opioid medication can help deter misuse and diversion. This suggests resident surgeons could participate in a specialty-specific OPE to improve opioid prescribing.Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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