AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focused on developing an opioid prescribing algorithm to provide dosage guidelines for various conditions and procedures, aiming for 90% compliance within a year of implementation.
  • Conducted at a pediatric care facility, the initiative involved a multidisciplinary team that reviewed prescribing practices and emphasized evaluations of medical history and pain type before prescribing opioids.
  • Over five years, opioid prescriptions significantly decreased, with compliance to the guidelines rising to about 85%-100% for specific surgical procedures, and variability in prescribed doses also significantly reduced.

Article Abstract

Background: Opioids are indicated for moderate-to-severe pain caused by trauma, ischemia, surgery, cancer and sickle cell disease, and vaso-occlusive episodes (SCD-VOC). There is only limited evidence regarding the appropriate number of doses to prescribe for specific indications. Therefore, we developed and implemented an opioid prescribing algorithm with dosing guidelines for specific procedures and conditions. We aimed to reach and sustain 90% compliance within 1 year of implementation.

Methods: We conducted this quality improvement effort at a pediatric academic quaternary care institution. In 2018, a multidisciplinary team identified the need for a standard approach to opioid prescribing. The algorithm guides prescribers to evaluate the medical history, physical examination, red flags, pain type, and to initiate opioid-sparing interventions before prescribing opioids. Opioid prescriptions written between January 2015 and September 2020 were included. Examples from 2 hospital departments will be highlighted. Control charts for compliance with guidelines and variability in the doses prescribed are presented for selected procedures and conditions.

Results: Over 5 years, 83 037 opioid prescriptions in 53 804 unique patients were entered electronically. The encounters with ≥1 opioid prescription decreased from 48% to 25% between 2015 and 2019. Compliance with the specific guidelines increased to ∼85% for periacetabular osteotomies and SCD-VOC and close to 100% for anterior-cruciate ligament surgery. In all 3 procedures and conditions, variability in the number of doses prescribed decreased significantly.

Conclusion: We developed an algorithm, guidelines, and a process for improvement. The number of opioid prescriptions and variability in opioid prescribing decreased. Future evaluation of specific initiatives within departments is needed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1542/hpeds.2021-005990DOI Listing

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