Abstract

To explore prescribers' understanding of what makes initial prescription of opioids become long-term opioid therapy (opioids >90days). A qualitative research design, phenomenography, was used for this study. Fifteen attending physicians working within primary, secondary and tertiary care in Sweden in the fields of general practice, rehab medicine, orthopedic surgery, neurosurgery, or obstetrics and gynecology were purposively recruited consecutively until categorical saturation was reached. Semi-structured interviews were used for data collection. The transcripts were analyzed and categorized by two researchers. A third researcher checked forconsistency between the data and the categories. An outcome space was constructed representing the logical relationship between the categories. The analysis identified six categories: The addictive opioid, The deserving patient, The ignorant prescriber, The lost patient, The compassionate prescriber, and The exposed prescriber. The differences in conceptions among the categories were clarified through three main contributors related to opioid therapy: prescriber's characteristics, patient's characteristics, and the healthcare organization. Opioids were understood as being addictive with long-term use promoting a downward spiral of tolerance and withdrawal driving the pain, leading to continued prescription. Long-term opioid therapy could be justified for patients who improved in function, and who were perceived as trustworthy. Inadequate follow-up of patients, poor training in pain management and addiction medicine, personal attitudes and beliefs about opioids, a perceived professional obligation to treat patients with pain, and lack of collegial support, were factors understood to promote clinically unindicated long-term opioid therapy.

Highlights

  • Safe and effective pain-treatment is essential when caring for people suffering from musculoskeletal injury or recovering from surgery

  • The analysis identified six categories: The addictive opioid, The deserving patient, The ignorant prescriber, The lost patient, The compassionate prescriber, and The exposed prescriber

  • In the U.S and Canada, the excessive use and reliance on opioids for alleviating pain has been a contributor to an opioid crisis, leading to opioid use disorder (OUD), overdoses, and opioid related deaths

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Summary

Introduction

Safe and effective pain-treatment is essential when caring for people suffering from musculoskeletal injury or recovering from surgery. In the U.S and Canada, the excessive use and reliance on opioids for alleviating pain has been a contributor to an opioid crisis, leading to opioid use disorder (OUD), overdoses, and opioid related deaths. This has highlighted the importance of safe and sciencesupported opioid prescribing and management practices [1, 2]. A continued practice of prescribing opioids, i.e., more than one refill of the initial opioid prescription within the first month of treatment, type of opioid, and opioid doses has been associated with long-term opioid therapy and problematic opioid use [9, 10].

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