• J Pain · Dec 2006

    Comparative Study Clinical Trial

    Impact of outside regulatory investigation on opiate administration in the emergency department.

    • Mara McErlean, Wayne Triner, and Amy Young.
    • Department of Emergency Medicine, Albany Medical College, Albany, New York 12208, USA.
    • J Pain. 2006 Dec 1;7(12):947-50.

    UnlabelledThis study was conducted to determine whether outside regulatory investigation related to opiate prescription diversion changes the prescribing frequency of opiates in an emergency department (ED). The presence of ED administration of opiates and prescriptions for opiates on discharge were compared across a baseline period 90 days before arrest of a physician for opiate diversion, a period immediately surrounding the arrest, and a follow-up period 90 days later. At no time was there investigation of excessive opiate prescribing for patients in the ED. The likelihood of receiving opiate analgesia either in the ED or on discharge was not significantly different for patients reporting mild pain or severe pain across all three periods. Patients with moderate pain (self-reported pain scores of 4 to 6 out of 10) were less likely to receive opiates in the ED immediately after the arrest compared with the baseline period (likelihood ratio, 0.4; confidence interval, 0.2 to 0.7). Patients with moderate pain were also less likely to receive prescriptions for opiates on discharge from the ED immediately after the arrest (likelihood ratio, 0.5; confidence interval, 0.3 to 0.9). These effects had diminished by 90 days.PerspectiveThis study indicates that factors outside of the provider-patient relationship influence the likelihood of receiving opiates during an ED visit. Awareness of this phenomenon might serve to reduce oligoanalgesia.

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