The effects of an evidence- and theory-informed feedback intervention on opioid prescribing for non-cancer pain in primary care: A controlled interrupted time series analysis

被引:16
|
作者
Alderson, Sarah L. [1 ]
Farragher, Tracey M. [2 ]
Willis, Thomas A. [1 ]
Carder, Paul [3 ]
Johnson, Stella [3 ]
Foy, Robbie [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Leeds, Leeds Inst Hlth Sci, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England
[2] Univ Manchester, Div Populat Hlth Hlth Serv Res & Primary Care, Manchester, Lancs, England
[3] Natl Hlth Serv Bradford Dist Clin Commissioning G, West Yorkshire Res & Dev, Bradford, W Yorkshire, England
基金
英国惠康基金; 英国医学研究理事会;
关键词
UNITED-STATES; PRESCRIPTION; MORTALITY; THERAPY;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pmed.1003796
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background The rise in opioid prescribing in primary care represents a significant international public health challenge, associated with increased psychosocial problems, hospitalisations, and mortality. We evaluated the effects of a comparative feedback intervention with persuasive messaging and action planning on opioid prescribing in primary care. Methods and findings A quasi-experimental controlled interrupted time series analysis used anonymised, aggregated practice data from electronic health records and prescribing data from publicly available sources. The study included 316 intervention and 130 control primary care practices in the Yorkshire and Humber region, UK, serving 2.2 million and 1 million residents, respectively. We observed the number of adult patients prescribed opioid medication by practice between July 2013 and December 2017. We excluded adults with coded cancer or drug dependency. The intervention, the Campaign to Reduce Opioid Prescribing (CROP), entailed bimonthly, comparative, and practice-individualised feedback reports to practices, with persuasive messaging and suggested actions over 1 year. Outcomes comprised the number of adults per 1,000 adults per month prescribed any opioid (main outcome), prescribed strong opioids, prescribed opioids in high-risk groups, prescribed other analgesics, and referred to musculoskeletal services. The number of adults prescribed any opioid rose pre-intervention in both intervention and control practices, by 0.18 (95% CI 0.11, 0.25) and 0.36 (95% CI 0.27, 0.46) per 1,000 adults per month, respectively. During the intervention period, prescribing per 1,000 adults fell in intervention practices (change -0.11; 95% CI -0.30, -0.08) and continued rising in control practices (change 0.54; 95% CI 0.29, 0.78), with a difference of -0.65 per 1,000 patients (95% CI -0.96, -0.34), corresponding to 15,000 fewer patients prescribed opioids. These trends continued post-intervention, although at slower rates. Prescribing of strong opioids, total opioid prescriptions, and prescribing in high-risk patient groups also generally fell. Prescribing of other analgesics fell whilst musculoskeletal referrals did not rise. Effects were attenuated after feedback ceased. Study limitations include being limited to 1 region in the UK, possible coding errors in routine data, being unable to fully account for concurrent interventions, and uncertainties over how general practices actually used the feedback reports and whether reductions in prescribing were always clinically appropriate. Conclusions Repeated comparative feedback offers a promising and relatively efficient population-level approach to reduce opioid prescribing in primary care, including prescribing of strong opioids and prescribing in high-risk patient groups. Such feedback may also prompt clinicians to reconsider prescribing other medicines associated with chronic pain, without causing a rise in referrals to musculoskeletal clinics. Feedback may need to be sustained for maximum effect.
引用
收藏
页数:18
相关论文
共 32 条
  • [11] Effectiveness of an intervention to improve antibiotic-prescribing behaviour in primary care: a controlled, interrupted time-series study
    Rodrigues, Antonio Teixeira
    Roque, Fatima
    Pineiro-Lamas, Maria
    Falcao, Amilcar
    Figueiras, Adolfo
    Herdeiro, Maria Teresa
    JOURNAL OF ANTIMICROBIAL CHEMOTHERAPY, 2019, 74 (09) : 2788 - 2796
  • [12] Assessing the impact of a national clinical guideline for the management of chronic pain on opioid prescribing rates: a controlled interrupted time series analysis
    Harry L. Hébert
    Daniel R. Morales
    Nicola Torrance
    Blair H. Smith
    Lesley A. Colvin
    Implementation Science, 17
  • [13] Assessing the impact of a national clinical guideline for the management of chronic pain on opioid prescribing rates: a controlled interrupted time series analysis
    Hebert, Harry L.
    Morales, Daniel R.
    Torrance, Nicola
    Smith, Blair H.
    Colvin, Lesley A.
    IMPLEMENTATION SCIENCE, 2022, 17 (01)
  • [14] Evaluation of an automated feedback intervention to improve antibiotic prescribing among primary care physicians (OPEN Stewardship): a multinational controlled interrupted time-series study
    Soucy, Jean-Paul R.
    Low, Marcelo
    Acharya, Kamal R.
    Ellen, Moriah
    Hulth, Anette
    Lofmark, Sonja
    Garber, Gary E.
    Watson, William
    Moran-Gilad, Jacob
    Davidovitch, Nadav
    Amar, Tamar
    McCready, Janine
    Orava, Matthew
    Brownstein, John S.
    Brown, Kevin A.
    Fisman, David N.
    MacFadden, Derek R.
    MICROBIOLOGY SPECTRUM, 2024, 12 (04):
  • [15] Effectiveness of intervention-based opioid de-prescribing strategies for patients with chronic non-cancer pain in primary care settings: A systematic review and meta-analysis
    Cai, Q.
    Chen, T. -C
    Baig, H.
    Starr, E.
    Steinke, D.
    Chen, L-C
    PHARMACOEPIDEMIOLOGY AND DRUG SAFETY, 2022, 31 : 17 - 18
  • [16] Evaluation of a complex intervention to improve primary care prescribing: a phase IV segmented regression interrupted time series analysis
    MacBride-Stewart, Sean
    Marwick, Charis
    Houston, Neil
    Watt, Iain
    Patton, Andrea
    Guthrie, Bruce
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF GENERAL PRACTICE, 2017, 67 (658): : E352 - E360
  • [17] A COMPREHENSIVE CLINIC-BASED STRATEGY TO PROMOTE SAFE OPIOID PRESCRIBING FOR CHRONIC NON-CANCER PAIN IN THE PRIMARY CARE SETTING
    James, Jocelyn
    Klein, Jared W.
    Chew, Lisa
    Merrill, Joseph
    Jackson, Sara L.
    JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2014, 29 : S472 - S472
  • [18] Feasibility study of a Behavioural Intervention for Opioid Reduction (BIOR) for patients with chronic non-cancer pain in primary care: a protocol
    Poole, Helen M.
    Frank, Bernhard
    Begley, Emma
    Woods, Aimee
    Ramos-Silva, Andreia
    Merriman, Mike
    McCulough, Roisin
    Montgomery, Catharine
    BMJ OPEN, 2023, 13 (01):
  • [19] CHANGING TRENDS AND PRESCRIBING PATTERNS IN OPIOID TREATED PRIMARY CARE PATIENTS WITH NON-CANCER PAIN OVER A 10-YEAR PERIOD
    Jani, Meghna
    Yimer, Belay Birlie
    Sheppard, Therese
    Lunt, Mark
    Dixon, William G.
    RHEUMATOLOGY, 2019, 58
  • [20] Changing Trends and Prescribing Patterns in Opioid-Treated Primary Care Patients with Non-Cancer Pain over a 10-Year Period
    Jani, Meghna
    Yimer, Belay Birlie
    Sheppard, Therese
    Lunt, Mark
    Dixon, William G.
    ARTHRITIS & RHEUMATOLOGY, 2018, 70