Moving Away From a "One Size Fits All" Model: Ensuring Opioid Stewardship Includes People Who Use Drugs.

J Addict Med

From the Department of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6H 0A5, Canada, (SP, SN, LT); British Columbia Centre on Substance Use, Vancouver, BC V6Z 2A9, Canada, (SN, LT); Providence Health Care, Vancouver, BC V6Z 1Y6, Canada, (TM); Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of British Columbia, 2405Wesbrook Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z3, Canada, (TM).

Published: August 2022

The opioid-driven overdose crisis has had devastating effects across North America, resulting from a complex interplay between individual, social-structural, and environmental factors. Changing approaches to pain management, increased heroin use, and potent synthetic opioids infiltrating the drug supply are compounded by both lack of access to opioid use disorder treatment and surrounding stigma. Inappropriate opioid prescribing practices in healthcare settings have played a central role, and in recent years, there has been increasing interest in implementing hospital-based opioid stewardship programs aimed at improving safety and monitoring opioid prescribing. There is a range of approaches taken by these programs, ranging from audit and feedback to consult services; however, a significant focus of many of these programs is on medication restriction. Such measures stand to negatively impact the care of people with complex healthcare needs, including those currently on long-term opioid therapy, and those with increased opioid tolerance. In this commentary, we emphasize the importance of creating opioid stewardship programs focused on appropriate pain treatment rather than solely on medication restriction to both appropriately prescribe to and manage pain in people who use illicit drugs. This population faces many barriers to care, such as unique dose requirements and high interpatient variability that "one size fits all" stewardship cannot appropriately address. Additionally, opioid stewardship programs that use patient-centered strategies such as multi-disciplinary consult services have been shown to lead to positive health outcomes and have significant potential to address the current shortcomings in pain management for people who use illicit drugs.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ADM.0000000000000938DOI Listing

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