Variation in postoperative narcotic prescribing after pediatric appendectomy.

J Pediatr Surg

Department of Pediatric Surgery, John R Oishei Children's Hospital, Buffalo, NY; Department of Surgery, State University of New York at Buffalo.

Published: September 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Overuse of prescription opioids in both adults and children has raised concerns, prompting the need for educational interventions to potentially reduce opioid prescriptions in pediatric patients after surgeries.
  • A study was conducted comparing opioid prescriptions before and after implementing staff education and standardized protocols for managing pain in patients under 19 years following appendectomies, revealing a drastic drop in opioid prescriptions from 84.3% to 6.7% post-intervention.
  • Results showed that non-opioid pain management methods were effectively used, leading to high patient satisfaction and adequate pain control without an increase in emergency visits or complaints, indicating that educational strategies can successfully limit opioid use in pediatric post-operative care.

Article Abstract

Background: Overuse of prescription opioids by both pediatric and adult patients has garnered significant attention in recent years. Educational interventions have been shown to decrease prescription opioids post-operatively in the adult population; similar data have not previously been reported in pediatrics.

Methods: Educational interventions included staff education, institution of opioid standardization protocol, and distribution of educational materials to families. Chart review was performed pre- and post-intervention to compare prescribing practices following appendectomy in patients less than 19 years of age. Follow-up phone calls were used to assess patient satisfaction and pain control.

Results: Three hundred thirteen cases were identified pre-intervention [PRE] and compared to 119 cases postintervention [POST]. 84.3% of patients were given a prescription for opioids at time of discharge in the PRE cohort compared to 6.7% (p < 0.001) POST. There was a significant increase in non-opioid analgesia (p < 0.001) POST. There was no significant variability in opioid usage by type of surgery performed, attending provider, or patients' gender or age. Of the patients in the POST cohort, 60.5% were available for telephone follow-up. More than 80% of patients were given acetaminophen and/or ibuprofen POST and 94.4% reported adequate pain control; 88.9% reported that they would agree to avoid opioids again in the future. On follow-up survey, there was no increase in emergency department visits or phone calls for poorly controlled pain following the intervention.

Conclusion: Low-fidelity educational interventions and creation of a standardized pathway is an effective tool to reduce opioid prescribing and promote alternative means of analgesia without an increase in readmissions or presentation for pain.

Level Of Evidence: III.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2018.11.015DOI Listing

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