Prunuske Jacob P, St Hill Catherine A, Hager Keri D, Lemieux Andrine M, Swanoski Michael T, Anderson Grant W, Lutfiyya M Nawal
BMC Health Serv Res. 2014 Nov 19;14:563. doi: 10.1186/s12913-014-0563-8.
Non-malignant chronic pain (NMCP) is one of the most common reasons for primary care visits. Pain management health care disparities have been documented in relation to patient gender, race, and socioeconomic status. Although not studied in relation to chronic pain management, studies have found that living in a rural community in the US is associated with health care disparities. Rurality as a social determinant of health may influence opioid prescribing. We examined rural and non-rural differences in opioid prescribing patterns for NMCP management, hypothesizing that distinct from education, income, racial or gender differences, rural residency is a significant and independent factor in opioid prescribing patterns.
2010 National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS) data were examined using bivariate and multivariate techniques. NAMCS data were collected using a multi-stage sampling strategy. For the multivariate analysis performed the SPSS complex samples algorithm for logistic regression was used.
In 2010 an estimated 9,325,603 US adults (weighted from a sample of 2745) seen in primary care clinics had a diagnosis of NMCP; 36.4% were prescribed an opioid. For US adults with a NMCP diagnosis bivariate analysis revealed rural residents had higher odds of having an opioid prescription than similar non-rural adults (OR = 1.515, 95% CI 1.513-1.518). Complex samples logistic regression analysis confirmed the importance of rurality and yielded that US adults with NMCP who were prescribed an opioid had higher odds of: being non-Caucasian (AOR =2.459, 95% CI 1.194-5.066), and living in a rural area (AOR =2.935, 95% CI 1.416-6.083).
Our results clearly indicated that rurality is an important factor in opioid prescribing patterns that cannot be ignored and bears further investigation. Further research on the growing concern about the over-prescribing of opioids in the US should now include rurality as a variable in data generation and analysis. Future research should also attempt to document the ecological, sociological and political factors impacting opioid prescribing and care in rural communities. Prescribers and health care policy makers need to critically evaluate the implications of our findings and their relationship to patient needs, best practices in a rural setting, and the overall consequences of increased opioid prescribing on rural communities.
非恶性慢性疼痛(NMCP)是基层医疗就诊的最常见原因之一。已有文献记载了在疼痛管理方面与患者性别、种族和社会经济地位相关的医疗保健差异。尽管尚未针对慢性疼痛管理进行研究,但研究发现,在美国农村社区生活与医疗保健差异有关。农村地区作为一个健康的社会决定因素可能会影响阿片类药物的处方。我们研究了用于NMCP管理的阿片类药物处方模式的农村和非农村差异,假设与教育、收入、种族或性别差异不同,农村居住情况是阿片类药物处方模式中的一个重要且独立的因素。
使用双变量和多变量技术检查了2010年全国门诊医疗调查(NAMCS)的数据。NAMCS数据是采用多阶段抽样策略收集的。在进行多变量分析时,使用了SPSS复杂样本逻辑回归算法。
2010年,估计在基层医疗诊所就诊的9325603名美国成年人(根据2745个样本加权)被诊断为NMCP;其中36.4%的人被开具了阿片类药物处方。对于被诊断为NMCP的美国成年人,双变量分析显示农村居民比类似的非农村成年人开具阿片类药物处方的几率更高(OR = 1.515,95% CI 1.513 - 1.518)。复杂样本逻辑回归分析证实了农村地区的重要性,并得出被开具阿片类药物处方的患有NMCP的美国成年人具有更高几率的情况:是非白人(AOR = 2.459,95% CI 1.194 - 5.066),以及居住在农村地区(AOR = 2.935,95% CI 1.416 - 6.083)。
我们的结果清楚地表明,农村地区是阿片类药物处方模式中一个不可忽视的重要因素,值得进一步研究。对于美国阿片类药物过度处方这一日益受到关注的问题,未来的研究现在应将农村地区作为数据生成和分析中的一个变量纳入。未来的研究还应尝试记录影响农村社区阿片类药物处方和护理的生态、社会和政治因素。开处方者和医疗保健政策制定者需要认真评估我们研究结果的影响及其与患者需求、农村环境中的最佳实践以及阿片类药物处方增加对农村社区的总体后果之间的关系。