Al Achkar Morhaf, Grannis Shaun, Revere Debra, MacKie Palmer, Howard Meredith, Gupta Sumedha
University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA, USA.
Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2018 Jan 18;18(1):29. doi: 10.1186/s12913-018-2830-6.
Prescription opioids have been linked to over half of the 28,000 opioid overdose deaths in 2014. High rates of prescription opioid non-medical use have continued despite nearly all states implementing large-scale prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMP), which points to the need to examine the impact of state PDMP's on curbing inappropriate opioid prescribing. In the short-term, PDMPs have been associated with short-term prescribing declines. Yet little is known about how such policies differentially impact patient subgroups or are interpreted by prescribing providers. Our objective was to compare volumes of prescribed opioids before and after Indiana implemented opioid prescribing emergency rules and stratify the changes in opioid prescribing by patient and provider subgroups.
An interrupted time series analysis was conducted using data obtained from the Indiana PDMP. Prescription level data was merged with census data to characterize patient socioeconomic status. Analyses were stratified by patients' gender, age, opioid dosage, and payer. The primary outcome indicator was the total morphine equivalent dose (MED) of dispensed opioids per day in the state of Indiana. Also considered were number of unique patients, unique providers, and prescriptions; MED per transaction and per day; and number of days supplied.
After controlling for time trends, we found that total MED for opioids decreased after implementing the new emergency rules, differing by patient gender, age, and payer. The effect was larger for males than females and almost 10 times larger for 0-20 year olds as compared to the 60+ age range. Medicare and Medicaid patients experienced more decline in prescribing than patients with private insurance. Patients with prescriptions paid for by workers' comp experienced the most significant decline. The emergency rules were associated with decline in both the number of prescribers and the number of day supply.
Although the Indiana opioid prescribing emergency rules impacted statewide prescribing behavior across all individual patient and provider characteristics, the emergency rules' effect was not consistent across patient characteristics. Further studies are needed to assess how individual patient characteristics influence the interpretation and application of state policies on opioid prescribing.
2014年28000例阿片类药物过量死亡事件中,超过半数与处方阿片类药物有关。尽管几乎所有州都实施了大规模的处方药监测计划(PDMP),但处方阿片类药物的非医疗使用率仍然很高,这表明有必要研究州PDMP对遏制不适当阿片类药物处方的影响。短期内,PDMP与短期处方量下降有关。然而,对于此类政策如何对患者亚组产生不同影响或开处方的医生如何解读这些政策,我们知之甚少。我们的目标是比较印第安纳州实施阿片类药物处方紧急规则前后的阿片类药物处方量,并按患者和医生亚组对阿片类药物处方的变化进行分层。
使用从印第安纳州PDMP获得的数据进行中断时间序列分析。将处方水平数据与人口普查数据合并,以描述患者的社会经济状况。分析按患者的性别、年龄、阿片类药物剂量和付款人进行分层。主要结局指标是印第安纳州每天分发的阿片类药物的总吗啡当量剂量(MED)。还考虑了独特患者、独特医生和处方的数量;每次交易和每天的MED;以及供应天数。
在控制时间趋势后,我们发现实施新的紧急规则后,阿片类药物的总MED下降,因患者性别、年龄和付款人而异。男性的影响大于女性,0至20岁的患者与60岁以上年龄组相比,影响几乎大10倍。医疗保险和医疗补助患者的处方减少幅度大于有私人保险的患者。由工伤赔偿支付处方费用的患者下降最为显著。紧急规则与开处方医生数量和供应天数的下降有关。
尽管印第安纳州的阿片类药物处方紧急规则影响了所有个体患者和医生特征的全州处方行为,但紧急规则的效果在患者特征方面并不一致。需要进一步研究来评估个体患者特征如何影响州阿片类药物处方政策的解读和应用。