What Factors Affect Physicians' Decisions to Prescribe Opioids in Emergency Departments?

IF 1.7
Lauren E Sinnenberg, Kathryn J Wanner, Jeanmarie Perrone, Frances K Barg, Karin V Rhodes, Zachary F Meisel
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引用次数: 29

Abstract

Objective: With 42% of all emergency department visits in the United States related to pain, physicians who work in this setting are tasked with providing adequate pain management to patients with varying primary complaints and medical histories. Complicating this, the United States is in the midst of an opioid overdose epidemic. State governments and national organizations have developed guidelines and legislation to curtail opioid prescriptions in acute care settings, while also incentivizing providers for patient satisfaction and completeness of pain control. In order to inform future policies that focus on provider pain medication prescribing, we sought to characterize the factors physicians weigh when considering treating pain with opioids in the emergency department. Methods: We conducted and transcribed open-ended, semistructured qualitative interviews with 52 physicians at a national emergency medicine conference. Results: Participants reported a wide range of factors contributing to their opioid prescribing patterns related to three domains: 1) provider assessment of pain characteristics, 2) patient-based considerations, and 3) practice environment. Pain characteristics include the characteristics of various acute and chronic pain syndromes, including physicians' empathy due to their own experiences with pain. Patient characteristics include "trustworthiness," race and ethnicity, and the concern for risk of misuse. Factors related to the practice environment include hospital policy, legislation/regulation, and guidelines. Conclusion: The decision to prescribe opioids to patients in the emergency department is complex and nuanced. Physicians are interested in guidance and are concerned about the competing pressures placed on their opioid prescribing due to incentives related to patient satisfaction scores on one hand and inflexible policies that do not allow for individualized, patient-centered decisions on the other.

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哪些因素影响急诊科医生开阿片类药物的决定?
目的:在美国,42%的急诊科就诊与疼痛有关,在这种情况下工作的医生的任务是为不同主诉和病史的患者提供适当的疼痛管理。更复杂的是,美国正处于阿片类药物过量的流行之中。各州政府和国家组织制定了指导方针和立法,以减少急性护理机构中的阿片类药物处方,同时也激励提供者提高患者满意度和疼痛控制的完整性。为了为未来的政策提供信息,重点关注提供者止痛药处方,我们试图描述医生在急诊科考虑用阿片类药物治疗疼痛时所权衡的因素。方法:我们在一次全国急诊医学会议上对52名医生进行了开放式、半结构化的定性访谈并进行了转录。结果:参与者报告了影响其阿片类药物处方模式的广泛因素,涉及三个领域:1)提供者对疼痛特征的评估,2)基于患者的考虑,以及3)实践环境。疼痛特征包括各种急慢性疼痛综合征的特征,包括医生因自身疼痛经历而产生的共情。患者特征包括“可信赖性”,种族和民族,以及对滥用风险的担忧。与实践环境相关的因素包括医院政策、立法/法规和指导方针。结论:对急诊科患者开阿片类药物的决定是复杂而微妙的。医生对指导感兴趣,并担心由于与患者满意度评分相关的激励和不允许个性化,以患者为中心的决策的僵化政策,他们对阿片类药物处方施加的竞争压力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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