Division of Pediatric Surgery, Children's Hospital Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California; Department of Surgery, Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California.
Division of Pain Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Children's Hospital Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California.
J Surg Res. 2022 Nov;279:42-51. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2022.05.023. Epub 2022 Jun 16.
Unused prescription opioids contribute to diversion, unintended exposure, and poisonings in adolescents. Factors associated with safe prescription opioid disposal for adolescents undergoing surgery are unknown.
Parents of adolescents (13-20 y) undergoing surgery associated with an opioid prescription were enrolled preoperatively. Parents completed a baseline survey measuring sociodemographics and family history of substance abuse and two postoperative surveys capturing opioid use and disposal at 30 and 90 d. Safe disposal was defined as returning opioids to a healthcare facility, pharmacy, take-back event, or a police station. Factors associated with safe opioid disposal were assessed using bivariate analysis.
Of 119 parent-adolescent dyads, 90 (76%) reported unused opioids after surgery. The majority of parents reporting unused opioids completed the surveys in English (80%), although many (44%) spoke another language at home. Most reported income levels <$60,000 (54%), did not attend college (69%), and had adequate health literacy (66%). Most parents (78%) did not report safe opioid disposal. Safe opioid disposal was associated with younger patient age, (median 14 y, IQR 13-16.5 versus median 15.5 y, IQR 14-17, P = 0.031), fewer days taking opioids (median 5, IQR 2-6 versus median 7, IQR 4-14, P = 0.048), and more leftover pills (median 20, IQR 10-35 versus median 10, IQR 5-22, P = 0.008).
Most parents fail to safely dispose of unused opioids after their adolescent's surgery. Younger patient age, shorter duration of opioid use, and higher number of unused pills were associated with safe disposal. Interventions to optimize prescribing and educate parents about safe opioid disposal are warranted.
未使用的处方类阿片类药物会导致青少年药物滥用、意外暴露和中毒。目前尚不清楚与接受手术的青少年安全处理处方类阿片类药物相关的因素。
在接受手术相关阿片类药物处方的青少年(13-20 岁)术前入组父母。父母完成了一项基线调查,内容包括社会人口统计学和药物滥用家族史,以及术后 30 天和 90 天的两次调查,以了解阿片类药物的使用和处理情况。安全处理是指将阿片类药物归还医疗机构、药房、回收点或警察局。使用单变量分析评估与安全阿片类药物处理相关的因素。
在 119 对父母-青少年中,90 名(76%)报告手术后有未使用的阿片类药物。大多数报告未使用阿片类药物的父母(80%)用英语完成了调查,尽管许多父母(44%)在家中说另一种语言。大多数报告收入水平低于 60000 美元(54%),未上大学(69%),且有足够的健康素养(66%)。大多数父母(78%)未报告安全处理阿片类药物。安全处理阿片类药物与患者年龄较小(中位数 14 岁,IQR 13-16.5 岁与中位数 15.5 岁,IQR 14-17 岁,P=0.031)、服用阿片类药物天数较少(中位数 5 天,IQR 2-6 天与中位数 7 天,IQR 4-14 天,P=0.048)和遗留的药丸较多(中位数 20 颗,IQR 10-35 颗与中位数 10 颗,IQR 5-22 颗,P=0.008)相关。
大多数父母在青少年手术后无法安全处理未使用的阿片类药物。患者年龄较小、阿片类药物使用时间较短、遗留的未使用药丸数量较多与安全处理相关。有必要进行干预以优化处方,并教育父母安全处理阿片类药物。