州级阿片类药物审查计划对受伤工人及其医疗服务提供者的影响:华盛顿州和俄亥俄州的定性研究。

IF 4.8 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Tasleem J Padamsee, Courtni Montgomery, Stefan Kienzle, Jeremy B Straughn, Andrea Elmore, Deborah L Fulton-Kehoe, Beryl Schulman, Thomas M Wickizer, Gary M Franklin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

政策要点 工人赔偿机构已经制定了阿片类药物审查政策,以减少不安全的处方。医疗服务提供者表示,与过去相比,他们开出的处方更加有限和谨慎;患者和医疗服务提供者都表示,双方建立了合作的疼痛管理关系,患者的疼痛控制效果令人满意。尽管制药公司和患者权益倡导者表达了他们的担忧,但阿片类药物审查计划一般不会导致患者疼痛得不到控制或功能减退,不会引起患者或医疗服务提供者的愤怒或抵制,也不会损害患者与医疗服务提供者的关系或临床自主权。其他拥有广泛医生网络的保险提供商可能会考虑采取类似的质量改进措施,以支持阿片类药物的安全处方:不安全的处方行为是美国阿片类药物接收不当、使用不安全和用药过量的主要原因之一。华盛顿州和俄亥俄州的工伤赔偿机构实施了阿片类药物审查计划(ORPs)--一种基于使用审查的质量改进形式,以遏制不安全处方。有证据表明,此类规定确实减少了不安全处方的开具,但制药公司和患者权益倡导者也对可能产生的负面影响表示担忧。本研究探讨了三类核心问题是否真的发生了:(1)患者的疼痛得不到控制或功能减退;(2)患者或医疗服务提供者对 ORPs 感到愤怒或抵触;以及(3)患者与医疗服务提供者的关系或临床自主权受到损害:对 48 名患者(21 名来自华盛顿州,27 名来自俄亥俄州)和 32 名医疗服务提供者(18 名来自华盛顿州,14 名来自俄亥俄州)进行了深入的半结构式访谈。采用归纳法和演绎法编制的编码手册进行了主题编码:阿片类药物管理条例的影响总体上是积极的:医疗服务提供者报告说,他们开出了更有限的处方,并注重多模式疼痛控制;患者报告说,他们对疼痛控制和康复以及与医疗服务提供者的合作关系感到满意。参与者将这些模式归因于对阿片类药物持谨慎态度的大环境;他们普遍认为工伤赔偿政策不会产生明显影响。患者和医疗服务提供者经常谈到与工伤赔偿机构互动的困难之处;这些影响包括简单的不便、护理延误、疼痛得不到控制以及身体恢复潜力下降等:总的来说,患者和医疗服务提供者所担心的三种负面影响都没有发生。尽管与工伤赔偿机构互动时会遇到与其他保险公司互动时常见的困难,但阿片类药物管制措施似乎总体上产生了积极的影响,并得到了普遍的好评。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Impacts of State-Level Opioid Review Programs on Injured Workers and Their Health Care Providers: A Qualitative Study in Washington and Ohio.

Policy Points Workers' compensation agencies have instituted opioid review policies to reduce unsafe prescribing. Providers reported more limited and cautious prescribing than in the past; both patients and providers reported collaborative pain-management relationships and satisfactory pain control for patients. Despite the fears articulated by pharmaceutical companies and patient advocates, opioid review programs have not generally resulted in unmanaged pain or reduced function in patients, anger or resistance from patients or providers, or damage to patient-provider relationships or clinical autonomy. Other insurance providers with broad physician networks may want to consider similar quality-improvement efforts to support safe opioid prescribing.

Context: Unsafe prescribing practices have been among the central causes of improper reception of opioids, unsafe use, and overdose in the United States. Workers' compensation agencies in Washington and Ohio have implemented opioid review programs (ORPs)-a form of quality improvement based on utilization review-to curb unsafe prescribing. Evidence suggests that such regulations indeed reduce unsafe prescribing, but pharmaceutical companies and patient advocates have raised concerns about negative impacts that could also result. This study explores whether three core sets of problems have actually come to pass: (1) unmanaged pain or reduced function among patients, (2) anger or resistance to ORPs from patients or providers, and (3) damage to patient-provider relationships or clinical autonomy.

Methods: In-depth semistructured interviews were conducted with 48 patients (21 from Washington, 27 from Ohio) and 32 providers (18 from Washington, 14 from Ohio) who were purposively sampled to represent a range of injury and practice types. Thematic coding was conducted with codebooks developed using both inductive and deductive approaches.

Findings: The consequences of opioid regulations have been generally positive: providers report more limited prescribing and a focus on multimodal pain control; patients report satisfactory pain control and recovery alongside collaborative relationships with providers. Participants attribute these patterns to a broad environment of opioid caution; they do not generally perceive workers' compensation policies as distinctly impactful. Both patients and providers comment frequently on the difficult aspects of interacting with workers' compensation agencies; effects of these range from simple inconvenience to delays in care, unmanaged pain, and reduced potential for physical recovery.

Conclusions: In general, the three types of feared negative impacts have not come to pass for either patients or providers. Although interacting with workers' compensation agencies involves difficulties typical of interacting with other insurers, opioid controls seem to have generally positive effects and are generally perceived of favorably.

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来源期刊
Milbank Quarterly
Milbank Quarterly 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
9.60
自引率
3.00%
发文量
37
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Milbank Quarterly is devoted to scholarly analysis of significant issues in health and health care policy. It presents original research, policy analysis, and commentary from academics, clinicians, and policymakers. The in-depth, multidisciplinary approach of the journal permits contributors to explore fully the social origins of health in our society and to examine in detail the implications of different health policies. Topics addressed in The Milbank Quarterly include the impact of social factors on health, prevention, allocation of health care resources, legal and ethical issues in health policy, health and health care administration, and the organization and financing of health care.
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