AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigated the link between neighborhood opioid prescription rates and opioid-related deaths among individuals who did not have an opioid prescription.
  • Using data from Ontario between 2013 and 2019, the researchers found no significant relationship between the volume of prescribed opioids and overall opioid mortality, though there was a positive association with prescription-related deaths and an inverse association with nonprescription-related deaths.
  • The findings suggest that while prescribed opioids may help some patients, they may also pose risks; thus, addressing the opioid epidemic requires a balanced approach that supports effective pain management and enhances safety through harm-reduction strategies.

Article Abstract

Objective: Recent Canadian data show that the prescribing of opioids has declined while the number of opioid deaths continues to rise. This study aimed to assess the relationship between neighborhood-level opioid prescription rates and opioid-related mortality among individuals without an opioid prescription.

Method: This was a nested case-control study using data in Ontario from 2013 to 2019. Neighborhood-level data were analyzed by using dissemination areas that consist of 400-700 people. Cases were defined as individuals who had an opioid-related death without an opioid prescription filled in the year prior. Cases and controls were matched using a disease risk score. After matching, there were 2,401 cases and 8,813 controls. The primary exposure was the total volume of opioids dispensed within the individual's dissemination area in the 90 days before the index date. Conditional logistic regression was used to examine the association between opioid prescriptions and the risk of overdose.

Results: There was no significant association between the total volume of opioid prescriptions dispensed in a dissemination area and opioid-related mortality. In subgroup analyses stratifying the cohort into prescription and nonprescription opioid-related mortality, the number of prescriptions dispensed was positively associated with prescription opioid-related mortality. There was also a significant inverse association between the increased total volume of opioids dispensed and nonprescription opioid mortality.

Conclusions: Our results suggest that prescription opioids dispensed within a neighborhood can have both potential benefits and harms. The opioid epidemic requires a nuanced approach that ensures appropriate pain care for patients while also creating a safer environment for opioid use through harm-reduction strategies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.15288/jsad.22-00170DOI Listing

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