Ciampa Maeghan L, Liang Joy, O'Hara Thomas A, Joel Constance L, Sherman William E
Department of General Surgery, Dwight D Eisenhower Army Medical Center, 300 East Hospital Rd, Fort Gordon, GA, 30901, USA.
Surg Endosc. 2023 Mar;37(3):2253-2259. doi: 10.1007/s00464-022-09464-8. Epub 2022 Aug 2.
Managing postoperative pain requires an individualized approach in order to balance adequate pain control with risk of persistent opioid use and narcotic abuse associated with inappropriately outsized narcotic prescriptions. Shared decision-making has been proposed to address individual pain management needs. We report here the results of a quality improvement initiative instituting prescribing guidelines using shared decision-making and preoperative pain expectation and management education to decrease excess opioid pills after surgery and improve patient satisfaction.
Pre-intervention prescribing habits were obtained by retrospective review perioperative pharmacy records for patients undergoing general surgeries in the 24 months prior to initiation of intervention. Patients scheduled to undergo General Surgery procedures were given a survey at their preoperative visit. Preoperative education was performed by the surgical team as a part of the Informed Consent process using a standardized handout and patients were asked to choose the number of narcotic pills they wished to obtain within prescribing recommendations. Postoperative surveys were administered during or after their 2-week postoperative visit.
131 patients completed pre-intervention and post-intervention surveys. The average prescription size decreased from 12.29 oxycodone pills per surgery prior to institution of pathway to 6.80 pills per surgery after institution of pathway (p < 0.001). The percentage of unused pills after surgery decreased from an estimated 70.5% pre-intervention to 48.5% (p < 0.001) post-intervention. 61.1% of patients with excess pills returned or planned to return medication to the pharmacy with 16.8% of patients reporting alternative disposal of excess medication. Patient-reported satisfaction was higher with current surgery compared to prior surgeries (p < 0.001).
Institution of procedure-specific prescribing recommendations and preoperative pain management education using shared decision-making between patient and provider decreases opioid excess burden, resulting in fewer unused narcotic pills entering the community. Furthermore, allowing patients to participate in decision-making with their provider results in increased patient satisfaction.
术后疼痛管理需要个体化方法,以在充分控制疼痛与持续使用阿片类药物及与不适当大剂量麻醉处方相关的麻醉品滥用风险之间取得平衡。有人提出采用共同决策来满足个体疼痛管理需求。我们在此报告一项质量改进举措的结果,该举措制定了处方指南,采用共同决策以及术前疼痛预期和管理教育,以减少术后多余的阿片类药物片数并提高患者满意度。
通过回顾干预开始前24个月接受普通外科手术患者的围手术期药房记录,获取干预前的处方习惯。计划接受普通外科手术的患者在术前就诊时接受调查。手术团队在知情同意过程中使用标准化讲义进行术前教育,并要求患者在处方建议范围内选择希望获得的麻醉药片数。术后调查在术后2周就诊期间或之后进行。
131名患者完成了干预前和干预后的调查。每条路径实施前,每次手术的羟考酮平均处方量为12.29片,路径实施后降至每次手术6.80片(p<0.001)。术后未使用药片的比例从干预前估计的70.5%降至干预后的48.5%(p<0.001)。61.1%有多余药片的患者将药物退回或计划退回药房,16.8%的患者报告对多余药物进行了其他处理。与之前的手术相比,患者报告对当前手术的满意度更高(p<0.001)。
制定针对特定手术的处方建议以及患者与提供者之间采用共同决策的术前疼痛管理教育,可减轻阿片类药物过量负担,减少进入社区的未使用麻醉药片数量。此外,让患者与提供者共同参与决策可提高患者满意度。