• J Hosp Med · Oct 2021

    Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Discharge Opioid Prescribing From a Hospital Medicine Service.

    • Aksharananda Rambachan, Margaret C Fang, Priya Prasad, and Nicholas Iverson.
    • Division of Hospital MedicineUniversity of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
    • J Hosp Med. 2021 Oct 1; 16 (10): 589-595.

    BackgroundDifferential opioid prescribing patterns have been reported in non-White patient populations. However, these disparities have not been well described among hospitalized medical inpatients.ObjectiveTo describe differences in opioid prescribing patterns among inpatients discharged from the general medicine service based on race/ethnicity.Design, Setting, And ParticipantsFor this retrospective study, we performed a multivariable logistic regression for patient race/ethnicity and whether patients received an opioid prescription at discharge and a negative binomial regression for days of opioids prescribed at discharge. The study included all 10,953 inpatients discharged from the general medicine service from June 2012 to November 2018 at University of California San Francisco Medical Center who received opioids during the last 24 hours of their hospitalization.Main Outcomes And MeasuresWe examined two primary outcomes: whether a patient received an opioid prescription at discharge, and, for patients prescribed opioids, the number of days dispensed.ResultsCompared with White patients, Black patients were less likely to receive an opioid prescription at discharge (predicted population rate of 47.6% vs 50.7%; average marginal effect [AME], -3.1%; 95% CI, -5.5% to -0.8%). Asian patients were more likely to receive an opioid prescription on discharge (predicted population rate, 55.6% vs 50.7%; AME, +4.9; 95% CI, 1.5%-8.3%). We also found that Black patients received a shorter duration of opioid days compared with White patients (predicted days of opioids on discharge, 15.7 days vs 17.8 days; AME, -2.1 days; 95% CI, -3.3 to -0.9).ConclusionBlack patients were less likely to receive opioids and received shorter courses at discharge compared with White patients, adjusting for covariates. Asian patients were the most likely to receive an opioid prescription.

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