• BMJ open · Nov 2020

    Evaluating the intended and unintended consequences of opioid-prescribing interventions on primary care in British Columbia, Canada: protocol for a retrospective population-based cohort study.

    • Dimitra Panagiotoglou, Rita McCracken, M Ruth Lavergne, Erin C Strumpf, Tara Gomes, Benedikt Fischer, Austyn Brackett, Cheyenne Johnson, and Perry Kendall.
    • Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health, McGill University, Montreal, Québec, Canada dimitra.panagiotoglou@mcgill.ca.
    • BMJ Open. 2020 Nov 5; 10 (11): e038724.

    IntroductionBetween 2015 and 2018, there were over 40 000 opioid-related overdose events and 4551 deaths among residents in British Columbia (BC). During this time the province mobilised a variety of policy levers to encourage physicians to expand access to opioid agonist treatment and the College of Physicians and Surgeons of British Columbia (CPSBC) released a practice standard establishing legally enforceable minimum thresholds of professional behaviour in the hopes of curtailing overdose events. Our goal is to conduct a comprehensive investigation of the intended and unintended consequences of these policy changes. Specifically, we aim to understand the effects of these measures on physician prescribing behaviours, identify physician characteristics associated with uptake of the new measures, and measure the effects of the policy changes on patients' access to quality primary care.Methods And AnalysisThis is a population-level, retrospective cohort study of all BC primary care physicians who prescribed any opioid medication for opioid-use disorder or chronic non-cancer pain during the study period, and their patients. The study period is 1 January 2013-31 December 2018, with a 1-year wash-in period (1 January 2012-31 December 2012) to exclude patients who initiated long-term opioid treatment prior to our study period or whose pain type (ie, 'chronic non-cancer', 'acute', 'cancer or palliative', or 'other') cannot be confirmed. The project combines five administrative health datasets under the authority of the BC Ministry of Health, with the CPSBC's Physician Registry, BC Cancer Agency's Cancer Registry and Vital Statistics' Mortality data. We will create measures of prescribing concordance, access, continuity, and comprehensiveness to assess primary care delivery and quality at both the physician and patient level. We will use generalised estimating equations, interrupted time series, mixed effects models, and funnel plots to identify factors related to changes in prescribing and evaluate the impact of the changes to prescribing policies. Results will be reported using appropriate Enhancing the QUAlity and Transparency Of health Research guidelines (eg, STrengthening the Reporting of OBservational studies in Epidemiology).Ethics And DisseminationThis study has been approved by McGill University's Institutional Review Board (#A11-M55-19A), and the University of British Columbia's Research Ethics Board (#H19-03537). We will disseminate results via a combination of open access peer-reviewed journal publications, conferences, lay summaries and OpEds.© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.

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