• Psychiatr Serv · Nov 2015

    Outpatient Provider Contact Prior to Unintentional Opioid Overdose Among VHA Service Users.

    • Lewei Allison Lin, Amy S B Bohnert, Mark A Ilgen, Paul N Pfeiffer, Dara Ganoczy, and Frederic C Blow.
    • The authors are affiliated with the Department of Psychiatry, University of Michigan, and with the Department of Veterans Affairs Center for Clinical Management Research, Ann Arbor, Michigan (e-mail: leweil@med.umich.edu ).
    • Psychiatr Serv. 2015 Nov 1; 66 (11): 1149-54.

    ObjectivesPrescription opioid medications are the most commonly implicated substances in unintentional overdoses. Outpatient health care encounters represent a potential opportunity to intervene to reduce opioid overdose risk. This study assessed the timing and type of outpatient provider contacts prior to death from unintentional prescription opioid overdose.MethodsThis study examined all adult patients nationally in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) who died from unintentional prescription opioid overdose in fiscal years 2004-2007 and who used VHA services anytime within two years of their deaths (N=1,813). For those whose final treatment contact was in an outpatient setting (N=1,457), demographic, clinical, and treatment characteristics were compared among patients categorized by the location of their last contact.ResultsAmong individuals last seen in outpatient settings, 33% were seen within one week of their overdose and 62% within one month of their overdose. A substantial proportion of patients (30%) were last seen within one month of death in mental health or substance use disorder outpatient settings. The majority of patients (86%) did not fill an opioid prescription on their last outpatient visit prior to death from unintentional opioid overdose.ConclusionsMost patients who died by unintentional prescription opioid overdose were seen in outpatient settings within a month of their overdose. These settings may provide an opportunity to prevent patients from dying from prescription opioid overdoses. Interventions to reduce risk should not be limited to visits during which an opioid is prescribed.

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