Affiliation:
1. Department of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery University of Washington Seattle Washington USA
2. Department of Surgery University of Washington Seattle Washington USA
3. Department of Biostatistics Seattle Children's Research Institute Seattle Washington USA
4. Division of Pediatric Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery Seattle Children's Hospital Seattle Washington USA
5. Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine University of Washington Seattle Washington USA
6. Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine Seattle Children's Hospital Seattle Washington USA
Abstract
AbstractObjectivePostoperative pain is the most common morbidity associated with tonsillectomy. Opioids are frequently used in multimodal posttonsillectomy analgesia regimens; however, concerns regarding respiratory depression, drug‐drug interactions, and medication misuse necessitate responsible opioid stewardship among prescribing surgeons. It is unclear if intentionally reducing opioid prescription doses negatively affects the patient experience.MethodsA quality improvement team reviewed all posttonsillectomy opioid prescriptions at a pediatric ambulatory surgery center between January and June 2021 (preintervention, 163 patients). Following this review, we performed an opioid education session for surgeons and studied opioid prescribing habits between July and December 2021 (Plan‐Do‐Study‐Act [PDSA] 1, 152 patients). We then implemented a standardized prescription protocol of 7 doses of oxycodone per patient and again reviewed prescriptions between January and June 2022 (PDSA 2, 178 patients). The following measures were evaluated: initial number of opioid doses prescribed, need for refills, 7‐day emergency department (ED) visits, and readmissions.ResultsEach intervention reduced the average number of initial oxycodone doses per patient (12.2 vs 9.2 vs 6.9 doses, P < .001). There were no changes in the rate of refill requests, 7‐day ED visits, and readmissions, by descriptive or Statistical Process Control analyses.DiscussionIn 2 PDSA cycles, we achieved a 43% reduction in the number of doses of oxycodone prescribed following tonsillectomy. We did not observe any increased rates in balancing measures, which are surrogates for unintentional effects of PDSA changes, including refills, ED presentations, and readmission rates.Implications for PracticeDirected provider education and standardized posttonsillectomy prescription protocols can safely decrease postoperative opioid prescribing. Further PDSA cycles are required to consider even fewer opioid prescription doses.
Subject
Otorhinolaryngology,Surgery
Cited by
4 articles.
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