AI Article Synopsis

  • Following total hip and knee surgeries, increased opioid use can lead to poor recovery outcomes; this study looks at how Florida's laws affected opioid prescriptions.* -
  • Researchers analyzed data from 651 patients over three time periods: before any laws, after a seven-day prescription limit, and after mandatory electronic prescribing, observing significant decreases in prescribed opioid amounts.* -
  • The study found that new legislative mandates successfully lowered opioid prescriptions without negatively impacting patient recovery, highlighting the importance of regulations in shaping medical practices.*

Article Abstract

Background: Following total hip arthroplasty (THA) and total knee arthroplasty (TKA), increased opioid use is associated with poor clinical outcomes. This study investigates implications of Florida legislative mandates on prescribing practices and opioid utilization following primary THA and TKA.

Methods: We retrospectively reviewed patients undergoing primary TKA or THA between January 1, 2018, to December 31, 2020 at our academic medical center. Three groups were identified: procedures performed prior to mandates, after seven-day prescription limit, and after mandated electronic prescribing. A multivariate analyses of variance evaluated length of stay, morphine milligram equivalents (MMEs), age, body mass index and number of prescription refills. Chi-square tests compared preoperative opioid use, readmissions, and discharge disposition.

Results: There were 198 patients in group one, 238 patients in group two, and 215 patients in group three (N = 651). Prior to any mandates, patients were prescribed 822.3 + 626.7 MMEs. Following a seven-day prescription limit this decreased to 465.0 + 296.0 MMEs ( < .001), which further decreased after mandated electronic prescribing (228.0 + 284.4 MMEs [ < 0.001]). Patients undergoing THA were prescribed less MME than those undergoing TKA. There was a 2.6% 90-day readmission rate, with no pain-related readmissions.

Conclusions: Florida legislative mandates for opioid prescription quantities and electronic prescribing have effectively reduced average MMEs prescribed following primary arthroplasty. Despite a shift towards ambulatory surgery, opioid utilization decreased without compromising patient outcomes. These findings underscore the significance of both legislative and surgical practices influencing opioid prescribing habits among orthopaedic surgeons.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10790000PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.artd.2023.101275DOI Listing

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