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Erschienen in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 6/2020

28.10.2019 | Original Research

“It Sometimes Doesn’t Even Work”: Patient Opioid Assessments as Clues to Therapeutic Flexibility in Primary Care

verfasst von: Stephen G. Henry, MD MSc, Melissa M. Gosdin, PhD, Anne E. C. White, PhD, Richard L. Kravitz, MD MSPH

Erschienen in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Ausgabe 6/2020

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Abstract

Background

Physicians’ fear of difficult patient interactions is an important barrier to discontinuing long-term opioid therapy.

Objective

To identify patient statements about opioids that indicate potential openness to tapering opioids or trying non-opioid pain treatments

Design

This is an observational study of regularly scheduled primary care visits involving discussion of chronic pain management. A coding system to characterize patient assessments about opioids, physician responses to assessments, and patient-endorsed opioid side effects was developed and applied to transcripts of video-recorded visits. All visits were independently coded by 2 authors.

Participants

Eighty-six established adult patients taking opioids for chronic pain; 49 physicians in 2 academic primary care clinics

Main Measures

Frequency and topic of patients’ opioid assessments; proportion of opioid assessments classified as clues (assessments indicating potential willingness to consider non-opioid pain treatments or lower opioid doses); physician responses to patient clues; frequency and type of patient-endorsed side effects

Key Results

Patients made a mean of 3.2 opioid assessments (median 2) per visit. The most common assessment topics were pain relief (51%), effect on function (21%), and opioid safety (14%). Forty-seven percent of opioid assessments (mean 1.5 per visit) were classified as clues. Fifty-three percent of visits included ≥ 1 clue; 21% of visits contained ≥ 3 clues. Physicians responded to patient clues with no/minimal response 43% of the time, sympathetic/empathetic statements 14% of the time, and further explored clues 43% of the time. Fifty-eight percent of patients endorsed ≥ 1 opioid-related side effect; 10% endorsed ≥ 3 side effects. The most commonly endorsed side effects were constipation (15% of patients), sedation (15%), withdrawal symptoms (13%), and nausea (12%).

Conclusions

Patient statements suggesting openness to non-opioid pain treatments or lower opioid doses are common during routine primary care visits. Listening for and exploring these clues may be a patient-centered strategy for broaching difficult topics with patients on long-term opioid therapy.
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Metadaten
Titel
“It Sometimes Doesn’t Even Work”: Patient Opioid Assessments as Clues to Therapeutic Flexibility in Primary Care
verfasst von
Stephen G. Henry, MD MSc
Melissa M. Gosdin, PhD
Anne E. C. White, PhD
Richard L. Kravitz, MD MSPH
Publikationsdatum
28.10.2019
Verlag
Springer International Publishing
Erschienen in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Ausgabe 6/2020
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Elektronische ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-019-05421-9

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