Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Implementation of a Quality Improvement Initiative to Decrease Opioid Prescribing After Cesarean Delivery
View through CrossRef
OBJECTIVE:
To assess whether a multiphase, departmental quality improvement effort decreases opioid prescribing and increases multimodal analgesic use after cesarean delivery.
METHODS:
This is a prospective quality improvement study. In phase 1 of the protocol, discharge providers implemented counseling regarding expectations for pain, typical need for opioids, and importance of multimodal nonopioid analgesic use and used shared decision-making to determine the number of opioids prescribed. Patients could select up to a maximum of 30 tablets of 5 mg oxycodone (or equivalent opioid), lower than the previous routine discharge prescription of 40 opioid tablets. The primary outcome was the mean (SD) number of opioid tablets prescribed on discharge with secondary outcomes including opioid refill rate within 30 days of discharge and rates of nonopioid analgesic prescriptions on discharge. In phase 2, using these results, we adjusted the protocol's maximum opioid prescription to 25 opioid tablets, but no other aspects of the protocol were changed. All data were analyzed with t test and χ2 analyses.
RESULTS:
Data from 624 women who underwent cesarean deliveries were analyzed. Opioids, most commonly oxycodone, were prescribed after 95% of all cesarean deliveries. The mean (SD) number of opioid tablets prescribed decreased from 33.2 (9.3) to 26.5 (6.7; P<.01) with the implementation of phase 1 having no effect on the opioid refill rate, 8.9% vs 8.1% (P=.79). These results allowed adjustment of the maximum recommended prescription to 25 opioid tablets, introducing phase 2 of the study, during which the mean (SD) number of opioid tablets prescribed further decreased from 24.9 (7.5) to 21.5 (6.3; P<.01) with no effect on the opioid refill rate, 6.3% vs 5.1% (P=.72). Overall, this represents a 35% decrease in opioid prescribing (P<.01). Rates of ibuprofen prescribing were 98% or higher throughout the study, but rates of acetaminophen prescribing increased from 32.6% before phase 1 to 92.0% after phase 2 (P<.001).
CONCLUSION:
Implementation of a multiphase quality improvement protocol to decrease opioid prescribing, combined with iterative review of discharge data, resulted in a significant decrease in the number of opioid tablets prescribed after cesarean delivery.
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Title: Implementation of a Quality Improvement Initiative to Decrease Opioid Prescribing After Cesarean Delivery
Description:
OBJECTIVE:
To assess whether a multiphase, departmental quality improvement effort decreases opioid prescribing and increases multimodal analgesic use after cesarean delivery.
METHODS:
This is a prospective quality improvement study.
In phase 1 of the protocol, discharge providers implemented counseling regarding expectations for pain, typical need for opioids, and importance of multimodal nonopioid analgesic use and used shared decision-making to determine the number of opioids prescribed.
Patients could select up to a maximum of 30 tablets of 5 mg oxycodone (or equivalent opioid), lower than the previous routine discharge prescription of 40 opioid tablets.
The primary outcome was the mean (SD) number of opioid tablets prescribed on discharge with secondary outcomes including opioid refill rate within 30 days of discharge and rates of nonopioid analgesic prescriptions on discharge.
In phase 2, using these results, we adjusted the protocol's maximum opioid prescription to 25 opioid tablets, but no other aspects of the protocol were changed.
All data were analyzed with t test and χ2 analyses.
RESULTS:
Data from 624 women who underwent cesarean deliveries were analyzed.
Opioids, most commonly oxycodone, were prescribed after 95% of all cesarean deliveries.
The mean (SD) number of opioid tablets prescribed decreased from 33.
2 (9.
3) to 26.
5 (6.
7; P<.
01) with the implementation of phase 1 having no effect on the opioid refill rate, 8.
9% vs 8.
1% (P=.
79).
These results allowed adjustment of the maximum recommended prescription to 25 opioid tablets, introducing phase 2 of the study, during which the mean (SD) number of opioid tablets prescribed further decreased from 24.
9 (7.
5) to 21.
5 (6.
3; P<.
01) with no effect on the opioid refill rate, 6.
3% vs 5.
1% (P=.
72).
Overall, this represents a 35% decrease in opioid prescribing (P<.
01).
Rates of ibuprofen prescribing were 98% or higher throughout the study, but rates of acetaminophen prescribing increased from 32.
6% before phase 1 to 92.
0% after phase 2 (P<.
001).
CONCLUSION:
Implementation of a multiphase quality improvement protocol to decrease opioid prescribing, combined with iterative review of discharge data, resulted in a significant decrease in the number of opioid tablets prescribed after cesarean delivery.
Related Results
A multicomponent intervention to improve adherence to opioid prescribing and monitoring guidelines in primary care
A multicomponent intervention to improve adherence to opioid prescribing and monitoring guidelines in primary care
Objective: Guidelines for appropriate management of chronic opioid therapy are underutilized by primary care physicians (PCPs). The authors hypothesized that developing a multicomp...
Predictors of success of trial of labor after cesarean section: A nested case–control study at public hospitals in Eastern Ethiopia
Predictors of success of trial of labor after cesarean section: A nested case–control study at public hospitals in Eastern Ethiopia
Background: One of the primary reasons for an increase in cesarean sections is obstetricians’ uncertainty about labor trial safety following a previous cesarean section. The succes...
Exploring the impact of the opioid epidemic in Black and Hispanic communities in the United States
Exploring the impact of the opioid epidemic in Black and Hispanic communities in the United States
Context: In recent years, due to an alarming increase in the number of opioid-related overdose fatalities for White, Non-Hispanics in rural and suburban communities across the Unit...
Global Trends in Social Prescribing: Web-Based Crawling Approach (Preprint)
Global Trends in Social Prescribing: Web-Based Crawling Approach (Preprint)
BACKGROUND
Social loneliness is a prevalent issue in industrialized countries that can lead to adverse health outcomes, including a 26% increased risk of pr...
Comparison of Outcomes of Subsequent Delivery Among Previous Vacuum and Previous Second Stage Cesarean Section Delivery Mothers at Kawempe National Referral Hospital: A Retrospective Cohort Study
Comparison of Outcomes of Subsequent Delivery Among Previous Vacuum and Previous Second Stage Cesarean Section Delivery Mothers at Kawempe National Referral Hospital: A Retrospective Cohort Study
Abstract
Introduction: The increasing trends in cesarean section (CS) with a decrease in operative vaginal deliveries is a major concern in health care system all over the ...
What physicians need to implement safer opioid prescribing: A qualitative study
What physicians need to implement safer opioid prescribing: A qualitative study
Introduction: In response to the US opioid epidemic, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a guideline (CDCG) for prescribing opioids for chronic pain. Successful i...
Abstract 4360: Opioid, non-opioid, and non-pharmacological pain management in patients with a history of cancer
Abstract 4360: Opioid, non-opioid, and non-pharmacological pain management in patients with a history of cancer
Abstract
Background Pain is highly prevalent among individuals with cancer. Consequently, adequate and equitable pain management are hallmarks of quality cancer care...
Assessing the Safety and Efficacy of Converting Adults with Sickle Cell Disease from Full Agonist Opioids to Buprenorphine
Assessing the Safety and Efficacy of Converting Adults with Sickle Cell Disease from Full Agonist Opioids to Buprenorphine
Abstract
Background: The management of pain in adults with sickle cell disease (SCD) is complex, with the intermingling of both acute vaso-occlusive events and chron...


