Abstract

6621 Background: Over-prescription of opioids after surgery contributes to the opioid abuse epidemic. Optimum post-operative opioid dosing is not defined. We evaluated prescribing patterns among different surgical services and created a standardized practice to reduce dispensation of unnecessary opioids. Methods: Opioid-naïve patients over 18 who underwent urologic, gynecologic, or breast surgery between March 2018 and January 2019 were eligible. A 4-month pre-intervention evaluation of number of opioid pills prescribed, number of pills taken, additional refills, and pain-control was obtained by contacting patients 7-10 days post-operatively. Findings were used to standardize prescriptions. Following implementation, patients undergoing surgery for the following 4-months were contacted to assess the impact of standardized opioid prescriptions. Data was compared with the institution’s electronic prescription system. Results: Pre-intervention, 368 eligible urology and gynecology patients (75.6%) responded and were prescribed between 6 and 40 opioid pills. Urology patients received median 28 (20, 30) tablets and 33% reported taking none. Gynecology patients received a median 20 (19, 28) tablets and 41% took none. Of 238 mastectomy patients, 176 (74%) reported taking median 3 and 4.9 of 20 prescribed opioid pills and 39% or 61% took no opioid pills (without vs with reconstruction). Prescriptions were standardized to 8, 7, and 10 tablets for urology, gynecology, and breast services. Post-intervention surveys revealed opioid tablets taken to be unchanged with minimal increase in refill requests. Conclusions: Prior to standardization, a large variation in opioids prescribed was observed. Standardizing opioid prescriptions resulted in fewer opioids dispensed without impacting pain control or refill requests.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call