Affiliation:
1. Division of Hospital Medicine, Department of Medicine
2. Biostatistics Collaboration Center, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA
Abstract
Abstract
Objective
To determine the efficacy of a program to limit the use of the intravenous (IV) push route for opioids on the experience of pain by inpatients and on associated safety events.
Design
Retrospective cohort study.
Setting
Two inpatient general medicine floor units at an urban tertiary care academic medical center.
Subjects
4,752 inpatient opioid recipients.
Methods
Patients in one unit were exposed to a multidisciplinary intervention to limit the prescription of opioids via the IV push route, with the other unit used as a control unit. The primary study outcome was the mean numeric pain score per patient during the hospital stay. Secondary measures included the hospital length of stay and postdischarge patient satisfaction. Fidelity measures included the percentage of the patient population exposed to each opioid administration route and the amount of opioid administered per route. Safety measures included patient disposition, transfer to intensive care, and incidence of naloxone administration.
Results
The intervention was successful in decreasing both the percentage of patients exposed to IV push opioids and the amount of opioid administered via the IV push route, but no associated changes in other study outcomes were identified.
Conclusions
For the treatment of acute pain in medical inpatients, no evidence of benefit or harm was identified in relation to an increase or decrease in the use of the IV push opioid route.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Clinical Neurology,General Medicine