Journal of pain & palliative care pharmacotherapy
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J Pain Palliat Care Pharmacother · Mar 2010
Costs of opioid abuse and misuse determined from a Medicaid database.
This study determined the associations between opioid abuse, dependence, and poisonings on costs and comorbidities in the Medicaid population. Medicaid patients in the Medicaid Analytic eXtract (MAX) files from 2002 to 2003 with 12 months of continuous eligibility, age >or=12 years, and with an opioid abuse/dependence-related diagnosis, including opioid abuse, dependence, or poisoning, in 2002 (index date) were matched 3:1 to Medicaid patients with no such diagnosis (controls). Medical costs by claim type incurred 12 months post index date were compared as was the prevalence of select comorbidities. ⋯ Other substance abuse (odds ratio [OR] 9.4), hepatitis A, B, or C (OR 8.8), and poisonings (OR 8.5) were highly associated with a diagnoses for opioid abuse or dependence (P < .001). Medicaid opioid abuse/dependence patients had more comorbidities and higher medical costs in 2002-2003 than Medicaid control patients. Successful interventions to prevent opioid abuse and manage comorbidities could help to reduce costs associated with opioid abuse in the Medicaid population.
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A brief history of pain, its pathophysiology, and management is provided. This primer on pain which is written for the consumer describes how pain is diagnosed, the role of gender and age, a discussion of future directions in pain research, ad includes an appendix that defines pain terms and concepts.
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J Pain Palliat Care Pharmacother · Jan 2009
ReviewPain and palliative care pharmacotherapy literature summaries and analyses.
Timely and important studies are reviewed and commentaries provided by leading palliative care clinicians. Symptoms, interventions, and treatment-related adverse events addressed in this issue are management of Alzheimer's agitation with donepezil; needle-free lidocaine powder for minor painful procedures; psychostimulants in depression; anticoagulation for cancer-related venous thromboembolism; effect of waiting for acute pain treatment on risk of chronic pain; and an update on severe cutaneous reactions associated with medications.