Abstract
Clinicians have long been aware of the danger of overreliance on opioids to manage acute pain, such as the pain accompanying surgery. The risk of adverse drug events is higher with opioids than with any other common class of drugs. Overreliance on opioids increases length of stay and hospital costs, while decreasing patient satisfaction. Opioids can lead to problems that continue well after discharge, including chronic pain, abuse and addiction, and even death. Increasingly, prescribed opioids have proved to lead to heroin addiction. Studies show that the same professionals who prescribe, administer, and monitor opioids lack basic knowledge about their safe and effective use. The alternative to opioid monotherapy in controlling acute pain is multimodal analgesia, an approach that relies on a nonopioid foundation with addition of adjunctive opioids as needed. An increasing number of nonopioid analgesics have proved effective in this role, with fewer side effects and a higher degree of safety than opioids. Accordingly, multimodal analgesia is recommended as best practice by most recognized authorities. Increasingly, governmental authorities hold prescribing clinicians and institutions legally liable for the downstream negative effects of opioids, including abuse and addiction. Addressing this issue should be a top priority for hospital risk managers.
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