Erschienen in:
01.12.2015 | Capsule Commentary
Capsule Commentary on Binswanger et al., Overdose Education and Naloxone for Patients Prescribed Opioids in Primary Care: A Qualitative Study of Primary Care Staff
verfasst von:
Jeffrey L. Jackson, MD, MPH
Erschienen in:
Journal of General Internal Medicine
|
Ausgabe 12/2015
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Excerpt
More people in the US die from overdose due to prescription opioids than from street drugs.
1 The rise in mortality rates has paralleled increased opiate use over the last decade.
2 There have been a number of responses, locally and nationally. “Safe” opiate prescribing includes screening patients for opiate risk, keeping opiate doses as low as possible, not combining them with benzodiazepines, requiring patients to sign opiate consent agreements, and performing regular urine monitoring. Most states have prescription drug monitoring programs. Several opiates have been reformulated to make them harder to misuse, and some formularies have dropped higher-risk opiates. …