HealthPartners Institute, Bloomington, Minnesota, USA.
Friends Research Institute, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Community Dent Oral Epidemiol. 2023 Feb;51(1):139-142. doi: 10.1111/cdoe.12820. Epub 2023 Feb 8.
Drug overdose has become a leading cause of accidental death in the United States. Between 2000 and 2015, the rate of deaths from drug overdoses increased 137%, including a 200% increase in the rate of overdose deaths involving opioids (including opioid pain relievers and heroin). Unnecessary opioid prescribing is one of the factors driving this epidemic.
The primary objective of this paper is to share lessons learned while conducting a randomized trial to de-implement opioids for post-extraction pain management utilizing clinical decision support (CDS) with and without patient education. The lessons learned from conducting this trial in a real-world setting can be applied to future dissemination and implementation oral health research.
The sources informing lessons learned were generated from qualitative interviews conducted with 20 of the forty-nine dental providers involved in the study following the implementation phase of the trial. Ongoing policy, social and environmental factors were tracked throughout the study.
Dental providers in the trial identified the impact of training that involved health professionals sharing information about the personal impact of pain and opioid use. Additionally, they found utility in being presented with a dashboard detailing their prescribing patterns related to other dentists. For the 30 general dentists with access to the CDS, use of its portal varied widely, with most using it 10%-49% of the time related to extractions.
In the context of a downward trend in opioid prescribing and considering the influence of the COVID pandemic during the trial, dental providers indicated benefit in training about negative personal impacts of prescribing opioids, and personally relevant feedback about their prescribing patterns. Only modest use of the CDS was realized. Implementation of this trial was impacted by governmental and health system policies and the COVID pandemic, prompt the consideration of implications regarding continuing ways to limit opioid prescribing among dental providers.
药物过量已成为美国意外死亡的主要原因。在 2000 年至 2015 年间,药物过量导致的死亡率上升了 137%,其中涉及阿片类药物(包括阿片类止痛药和海洛因)的过量死亡率上升了 200%。不必要的阿片类药物处方是导致这一流行的因素之一。
本文的主要目的是分享在利用临床决策支持(CDS)实施一项针对拔牙后疼痛管理的去阿片化随机试验中获得的经验教训,其中包括有无患者教育。从在真实环境中进行这项试验中获得的经验教训可应用于未来口腔健康研究的推广和实施。
从试验实施阶段之后对 49 名参与研究的牙医中的 20 名进行的定性访谈中获取了产生经验教训的资料来源。在整个研究过程中,对持续的政策、社会和环境因素进行了跟踪。
试验中的牙医发现,培训中让卫生专业人员分享有关疼痛和阿片类药物使用的个人影响的信息产生了影响。此外,他们发现,向他们展示一份详细说明他们与其他牙医的处方模式相关的仪表板很有用。对于 30 名可访问 CDS 的普通牙医来说,他们对其门户的使用情况差异很大,其中大多数人在与拔牙相关的情况下使用该门户的时间占 10%-49%。
在阿片类药物处方呈下降趋势的情况下,并且考虑到试验期间 COVID 大流行的影响,牙医表示,关于开阿片类药物处方的个人负面影响的培训以及与其处方模式相关的个人相关反馈很有帮助。仅实现了对 CDS 的适度使用。该试验的实施受到政府和卫生系统政策以及 COVID 大流行的影响,促使人们考虑继续限制牙医开阿片类药物处方的方法。