• Pain Med · Jun 2011

    Review

    Studying adverse events related to prescription opioids: the Utah experience.

    • Christina A Porucznik, Erin M Johnson, Brian Sauer, Jacob Crook, and Robert T Rolfs.
    • Division of Public Health, Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84108, USA. christy.porucznik@utah.edu
    • Pain Med. 2011 Jun 1;12 Suppl 2:S16-25.

    BackgroundEpidemiologists at the Utah Department of Health (UDOH) began to study prescription drug-related harm in 2004. We have analyzed several types of data including vital statistics, medical examiner records, emergency department diagnoses, and the state prescription registry to estimate the scope and correlates of prescription drug-related harm.ObjectivesTo describe data sets analyzed in Utah related to the problem of prescription drug-related harm with the goal of designing interventions to reduce the burden of adverse events and death.ResultsPrescription drug-related harm in Utah primarily involved opioids and can be examined with secondary analysis of administrative databases, although each database has limitations.ConclusionsMore analyses, likely from cohort studies, are needed to identify risky prescribing patterns and individual-level risk factors for opioid-related harm. Combining data sets via linkage procedures can generate individual-level drug exposure and outcome histories, which may be useful to simulate a prospective cohort.Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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