Dental opioid prescription patterns in academic and community settings

Author:

Oyler Douglas R.1ORCID,Rojas‐Ramirez Marcia V.2ORCID,Nakamura Aisaku3,Quesinberry Dana34,Miller Craig S.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacy Practice and Science, College of Pharmacy University of Kentucky Lexington Kentucky USA

2. Department of Oral Health Practice, College of Dentistry University of Kentucky Lexington Kentucky USA

3. Department of Biostatistics, College of Public Health University of Kentucky Lexington Kentucky USA

4. Department of Health Management and Policy, College of Public Health University of Kentucky Lexington Kentucky USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesReports of interventions to improve dental opioid prescribing have come primarily from academic settings, but most opioid prescriptions are written by community dentists. This analysis compares prescription characteristics between these two groups to inform interventions to improve dental opioid prescribing in community settings.MethodsState prescription drug monitoring program data from 2013 to 2020 were used to compare opioid prescriptions from dentists at academic institutions (PDAI) to prescriptions from dentists in non‐academic settings (PDNS). Linear regression was used to assess daily morphine milligram equivalents (MME), total MME, and days' supply, adjusting for year, age, sex, and rurality.ResultsPrescriptions from dentists at the academic institution accounted for less than 2% of over 2.3 million dental opioid prescriptions analyzed. Over 80% of prescriptions in both groups were written for <50 MME per day and for ≤3 days' supply. On average, in the adjusted models, prescriptions from the academic institution were written for about 75 additional MME per prescription and nearly a full day longer duration. Compared to adults, adolescents were the only age group who received both higher daily doses and longer days' supply.ConclusionsPrescriptions from dentists at academic institutions accounted for small percentage of opioid prescriptions, but prescription characteristics were clinically comparable between groups. Interventional targets to reduce opioid prescribing in academic institutions could be applied to community settings.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Dentistry

Reference32 articles.

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3. Association of Opioid Use With Pain and Satisfaction After Dental Extraction

4. National Academy of Medicine.First do no harm: marshalling clinician leadership to counter the opioid epidemic—a special publication from the National Academy of Medicine. Available from:https://nam.edu/firstno‐harm‐nam‐special‐publication. Accessed 14 Mar2022.

5. President calls on dentists to help curb opioid abuse;ADA;J Calif Dent Assoc,2016

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