Design and implementation of an electronic opioid management plan to support consistent communication of opioid analgesia prescribing intentions to patients and general practitioners

Author:

Su Elizabeth123ORCID,Aminian Parnaz12ORCID,McMaster Christopher14567ORCID,Eyles Jade3ORCID,Frauman Albert G.48,Garrett Kent2,Taylor Simone E.2ORCID,Liew David F. L.1458ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Medicines Optimisation Service Austin Health Melbourne Australia

2. Pharmacy Department Austin Health Melbourne Australia

3. Electronic Medical Record Services Austin Health Melbourne Australia

4. Department of Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics Austin Health Melbourne Australia

5. Department of Rheumatology Austin Health Melbourne Australia

6. Centre for Digital Transformation of Health University of Melbourne Melbourne Australia

7. Computing and Information Systems University of Melbourne Melbourne Australia

8. Department of Medicine University of Melbourne Melbourne Australia

Abstract

AbstractOpioid prescribing requires careful planning to minimise the risk of serious adverse outcomes. However, documentation of discharge opioid plans for patients and their general practitioners (GPs) is inconsistent, particularly when opioids are commenced in the emergency department or after surgery. We describe an initiative to promote consistent discharge opioid plan communication by implementing an opioid management plan (OMP) in our hospital's electronic medical record. Completion of an electronic form by the prescriber generates an OMP note in the medical history, which is used by the pharmacist to provide tailored opioid patient education. The OMP also populates the discharge summary that is sent to the GP and the Australian national digital health record platform, My Health Record. Preliminary evaluation shows incorporating OMP documentation into routine workflows has assisted prescribers to consistently document the plan for supplied opioids, supporting continuity of care. Workflow optimisation is ongoing to further improve discharge summary documentation and provision of patient‐friendly written information. This study was conducted as a quality improvement project and audits conducted as part of the project were approved by Austin Health's Office for Research (Project No: LNR/18/Austin/155). Informed patient consent was not required by Austin Health.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacy

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