Abstract
The use and misuse of opioid medications is an epidemic and public health emergency. There are currently no standard guidelines for treating perioperative pain in the pediatric population. The purpose of this study is to describe opioid use among pediatric patients after common orthopaedic surgeries. Patients between 5 and 20 years of age undergoing one of 7 common orthopaedic surgeries between the years 2018 to 2020 were prospectively studied. Patients and their families completed a medication logbook to track all doses of pain medication and associated pain scores. Three hundred forty-two patients completed the study, including 174 females and 168 males with a mean age of 14.0 years (range, 5 to 20y). A total of 4351 tablets or liquid doses of the narcotic medication, 44% of the total prescribed, were consumed. Of the prescribed medication,56% remained unused. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug use was identified to be the only independent predictor of less narcotic use, with a mean of 5.1 tablets ( P = 0.003) and 1.7 days ( P < 0.01) less opioid consumed among these patients. Thirty-two (9.4%) patients consumed 100% of their prescriptions. Nonmedicinal methods of pain control, most commonly ice, were used by 77% of patients, and this was highly variable between procedures. Physicians were cited as a source of medication information by only 50% of patients, with high variability between procedures. Opioid medication use in children and adolescents after orthopaedic surgery is significantly less than the number of tablets prescribed, with 56% of the medication prescribed remaining unused in the postoperative period. Duration of narcotic use was longer than anticipated with a wide SD (4.7d +/-3d).We recommend orthopaedic surgeons responsibly prescribe pain medications using evidence-based data or the results of their own experience monitoring medication consumption. In addition, and important in the setting of the "opioid epidemic," physicians must counsel patients and families on postoperative pain expectations and appropriate medication use. Level IV, prospective case series.
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