• Annals of surgery · Mar 2018

    An Educational Intervention Decreases Opioid Prescribing After General Surgical Operations.

    • Maureen V Hill, Ryland S Stucke, Michelle L McMahon, Julia L Beeman, and Richard J Barth.
    • Department of Surgery, Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, NH.
    • Ann. Surg. 2018 Mar 1; 267 (3): 468-472.

    ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to determine whether an educational intervention was sufficient to decrease opioid prescribing after general surgical operations.Summary Of Background DataWe recently analyzed opioid prescription and use for 5 common outpatient operations at our institution: partial mastectomy (PM), PM with sentinel lymph node biopsy (PM SLNB), laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC), laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair (LIH), and open inguinal hernia repair (IH). We found that opioids were over-prescribed. We formulated guidelines for opioid prescribing that would halve the number of pills prescribed and also satisfy 80% of patients' opioid requirements.MethodsWe discussed our findings and opioid-prescribing guidelines with surgeons at our institution. We recommended that surgeons encourage patients to use a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) and acetaminophen before using opioids. We then evaluated opioid prescriptions and use in 246 subsequent patients undergoing these same operations.ResultsThe mean number of opioid pills prescribed for each operation markedly decreased: PM 19.8 versus 5.1; PM SLNB 23.7 versus 9.6; LC 35.2 versus 19.4; LIH 33.8 versus 19.3, and IH 33.2 versus 18.3; all P < 0.0003. The total number of pills prescribed decreased by 53% when compared with the number that would have been prescribed before the educational intervention. Only 1 patient (0.4%) required a refill opioid prescription. Eighty-five percent of patients used either a NSAID or acetaminophen.ConclusionsBy defining postoperative opioid requirements through patient surveys and disseminating operation-specific guidelines for opioid prescribing to surgeons, we were able to decrease the number of opioids initially prescribed by more than half. Decreased initial opioid prescriptions did not result in increased opioid refill prescriptions.

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