• J. Occup. Environ. Med. · Feb 2012

    Increases in the use and cost of opioids to treat acute and chronic pain in injured workers, 1999 to 2009.

    • Edward J Bernacki, Larry Yuspeh, Robert Lavin, and Xuguang Grant Tao.
    • Division of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA. Bernacki@jhmi.edu
    • J. Occup. Environ. Med. 2012 Feb 1;54(2):216-23.

    ObjectiveQuantify temporal changes in opioid use.MethodsClaim and prescription data for Louisiana Workers' Compensation Corporation claims open from 1999 and 2009 were analyzed by claim age and type of opioid.ResultsThere was a significant cumulative yearly increase in morphine milligram equivalents prescribed for claimants with acute pain (55-mg increase per year), as well as chronic pain (461-mg increase per year). The cost per morphine milligram equivalent was approximately the same ($0.06 to $0.07) for long- and short-acting medications, but the medication cost was 8 times higher in claims where long-acting opioids were prescribed (with or without short-acting opioids) versus only short-acting medications.ConclusionsThe annual cumulative dose and cost of opioids per claim increased over the study period related to an increase in prescriptions for long-acting opioids.

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