Abstract

To assess emergency physician prescribing for simple extremity fractures-specifically, distal radius fractures-and describe the opportunity for reducing opioid prescribing. An electronic survey was distributed to 1238 emergency physicians employed by a nationwide practice serving 220 sites in 20 states. The survey presented two plain film views of a simple Colles fracture and asked: "For the last patient you discharged . . . with the above injury, which pain medications did you prescribe or recommend?" Responses were collected using a clickable checklist of common opioid and nonopioid pain medications. Respondents also specified the number of days covered by any prescription. We assessed associations between physician characteristics and opioid prescribing using the χ2 test, the Wilcoxon rank-sum test, and multivariable regression models. Responses were received from 447 (36%) physicians working in 18 states; 93% were trained in emergency medicine, 33% worked at academic sites, 68% had site volumes between 25,000 and 75,000, and the median experience was 10 (interquartile range 5-19) years. Overall, 92% (95% confidence interval 89%-95%) had prescribed an opioid for a median of 3 (interquartile range 3-4) days. The most commonly prescribed opioids were hydrocodone/acetaminophen (55%) and oxycodone/acetaminophen (20%). Physicians at academic sites prescribed opioids less frequently than those at nonacademic sites (88% vs 94%), but in multivariable regression there were no significant associations between physician characteristics and opioid prescribing. Emergency physicians commonly prescribe opioids for simple distal radius fractures. This represents a potential opportunity to reduce opioid prescribing.

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