Systematic literature review of emergency department physicians’ confidence to treat dental pain and the frequency with which they prescribe pain medications: Considerations for improved outcomes.

Q4 Dentistry
Sara Barna, Jean A. O’Donnell, M. Oakley
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Opioid analgesics, when taken as prescribed, are effective therapeutic options that provide pain relief for moderate to severe pain. The use of opioids in the treatment of pain has been increasing in the U.S. at an alarming rate, possibly contributing to the simultaneous rise in opioid abuse. Emergency departments play a major role in managing patients who present in pain, with approximately 10% of all opioid analgesic prescriptions written in hospital emergency departments. It is estimated that dental pain patients represent between 0.3-4% of the overall patient emergency department workload. Yet, the literature suggests that many of these physicians may not have sufficient training in handling dentofacial emergencies. The goal of this study was to systematically review the available literature on the topics of: 1) emergency department physicians’ training related to treating dental pain patients, and 2) the frequency in which they prescribe opioid medications to these patients. Methods: A systematic literature review was conducted among publications from 1985-2014 in the databases PubMed, Ovid, and Science Citation Index. The following search terms were used in this systematic literature review in order to identify the available literature of interest: “opioid and dental and emergency departments,” “dental pain and drug abuse,” “ER physicians and dental pain,” “ER physicians and drug abuse,” and “dental pain and emergency departments.” Publications in any language or country were considered, as well as editorials and commentaries. Findings: A total of 769 publications were identified. Seventeen publications met the criteria for inclusion. Eight studies commented on the emergency department physicians’ perceived “lack of training” in handling dentofacial emergencies and found that the majority of this group did not feel comfortable in managing dental patients. Nine studies assessed the frequency in which physicians prescribe pain medications to dental patients. Within these 9 studies, 5 specifically reported that between 29.6% and 81% of dental patients treated, received an “opioid” or a “narcotic” upon discharge. The remaining 4 studies in this group instead used non-specific terms that included “prescription medications,” “analgesics,” “pain medicine,” and “pharmacotherapy” to describe their findings and did not particularly report opioid prescribing trends. Of those publications rejected, 9 addressed the topic of dental pain patients presenting to non-dental providers, but did not include data that met the criteria related to emergency department prescribing frequency or physician training. Conclusions: This review of the literature suggests that emergency department physicians’ training level in treating dentofacial pain is less than ideal. It also confirms that individuals presenting to emergency departments with dental pain are a subset of the population of patients who are prescribed opioids as an analgesic. Coupling these results with the increased use of opioids in this country, dentists are in a key position to collaborate with emergency department physicians to help positively affect change. To further justify this approach, research agendas must carefully monitor prescribing patterns for dentofacial pain in the emergency department that are specific to opioid use, carefully excluding other non-narcotic analgesics. Should comparable outcomes of data related to the same topic in other non-dental settings exist, additional areas in medicine that may benefit from this partnership may also be identified. Moving forward, this interprofessional team approach may include a presence in medical school and residency program curricula so that alternative treatment options for addressing dental pain patients can be presented that consider the increased prescribing trends of opioids.
急诊科医生治疗牙痛的信心和他们开止痛药的频率的系统文献综述:对改善结果的考虑。
阿片类止痛药,当按处方服用时,是有效的治疗选择,可以缓解中重度疼痛。在美国,阿片类药物在治疗疼痛中的使用以惊人的速度增加,这可能导致阿片类物质滥用的同时增加。急诊科在管理疼痛患者方面发挥着重要作用,大约10%的阿片类止痛药处方是在医院急诊科开具的。据估计,牙痛患者占急诊科患者总工作量的0.3-4%。然而,文献表明,这些医生中的许多人可能没有受过足够的处理口腔紧急情况的培训。本研究的目的是系统地回顾有关以下主题的现有文献:1)急诊科医生与治疗牙痛患者相关的培训,以及2)他们给这些患者开阿片类药物的频率。方法:对1985-2014年PubMed、Ovid和Science引文索引数据库中的出版物进行系统的文献综述。在这篇系统的文献综述中,为了确定感兴趣的可用文献,使用了以下搜索词:“阿片类药物与牙科和急诊科”、“牙痛与药物滥用”、“急诊医生与牙痛”、,以及社论和评论。调查结果:共发现769份出版物。17份出版物符合入选标准。八项研究评论了急诊科医生在处理口腔急诊方面“缺乏培训”的看法,并发现这一群体中的大多数人在管理牙科患者时感到不舒服。九项研究评估了医生给牙科患者开止痛药的频率。在这9项研究中,5项特别报告称,接受治疗的牙科患者中,29.6%至81%在出院时服用了“阿片类药物”或“麻醉剂”。该组中剩下的4项研究使用了包括“处方药”、“镇痛剂”、“止痛药”和“药物治疗”在内的非特异性术语来描述他们的发现,并且没有特别报告阿片类药物的处方趋势。在被拒绝的出版物中,9份涉及牙科疼痛患者向非牙科提供者就诊的主题,但不包括符合急诊科处方频率或医生培训标准的数据。结论:这篇文献综述表明,急诊科医生在治疗颌面疼痛方面的培训水平并不理想。它还证实,因牙痛到急诊室就诊的人是开阿片类止痛药的患者群体的一个子集。将这些结果与该国阿片类药物使用的增加相结合,牙医在与急诊科医生合作以帮助积极影响变革方面处于关键地位。为了进一步证明这种方法的合理性,研究议程必须仔细监测急诊科针对阿片类药物使用的牙痛处方模式,仔细排除其他非麻醉性止痛药。如果在其他非牙科环境中存在与同一主题相关的可比数据结果,还可以确定可能受益于这种伙伴关系的其他医学领域。展望未来,这种跨专业团队的方法可能包括在医学院和住院医师项目课程中的存在,以便考虑到阿片类药物处方的增加趋势,提出解决牙痛患者的替代治疗方案。
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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来源期刊
Dentistry 3000
Dentistry 3000 Dentistry-Dentistry (all)
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
25
审稿时长
19 weeks
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