Thangarasu Sudhagar, Renganathan Gowri, Soskin Barney, Ruck Lela, Prakash Vishakh, Unnikrishnan Sumedha, Goranti Jyothsna, Cobos Everardo
Department of Internal Medicine, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso-The Hospitals of Providence Transmountain campus, El Paso, Texas, USA.
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, Edinburgh, Texas, USA.
J Med Educ Curric Dev. 2024 Nov 14;11:23821205241298353. doi: 10.1177/23821205241298353. eCollection 2024 Jan-Dec.
One of the major contributing factors to the opioid crisis, marked by a surge in opioid prescriptions, includes inadequate adherence to guideline-based pain management practices, highlighting the need for a comprehensive curriculum during residency training. In this study, we aim to assess opioid exposure prevalence among hospitalized patients and examine potential associations between disease conditions, patient demographics, and opioid prescriptions during their hospital stay.
In this retrospective cohort study at a southern California county teaching hospital, we analyzed the medical records of 2272 patients admitted to the IM resident inpatient teaching service for 1 year, from September 2017 through September 2018.
The study found that 44% of patients received opioid prescriptions during their hospital admission, with 23% receiving prescriptions at discharge and 45% having prior opioid exposure. Patients with prehospital opioid exposure had a 2-fold increased risk at discharge (Relative Risk: 2.51; < .0001). The hypothesis that factors such as gender, certain medical conditions, and previous opioid use influenced opioid prescriptions during hospitalization is disproved. Instead, hospital admission itself was the significant contributing factor to receiving opioids during acute care and at discharge, irrespective of the source of pain.
In conclusion, our study revealed that the primary determinant for opioid exposure during hospitalization is the inpatient admission itself rather than specific patient-related factors. The lack of a structured curriculum in residency training contributes to the default use of opioids for all pain types, highlighting the need for curricular reforms to focus on multimodal pain management principles.
阿片类药物危机的主要促成因素之一,表现为阿片类药物处方激增,包括对基于指南的疼痛管理实践的依从性不足,这凸显了住院医师培训期间需要全面课程。在本研究中,我们旨在评估住院患者的阿片类药物暴露患病率,并检查疾病状况、患者人口统计学特征与住院期间阿片类药物处方之间的潜在关联。
在加利福尼亚州南部一家县教学医院进行的这项回顾性队列研究中,我们分析了2017年9月至2018年9月期间入住内科住院医师教学服务的2272名患者的病历。
研究发现,44%的患者在住院期间接受了阿片类药物处方,23%在出院时接受了处方,45%有先前的阿片类药物暴露。院前有阿片类药物暴露的患者出院时风险增加2倍(相对风险:2.51;<0.0001)。性别、某些疾病状况和先前阿片类药物使用等因素影响住院期间阿片类药物处方的假设被推翻。相反,住院本身是急性护理期间和出院时接受阿片类药物的重要促成因素,无论疼痛来源如何。
总之,我们的研究表明,住院期间阿片类药物暴露的主要决定因素是住院本身,而非特定的患者相关因素。住院医师培训中缺乏结构化课程导致对所有类型疼痛默认使用阿片类药物,这凸显了课程改革以关注多模式疼痛管理原则的必要性。