Opioid Prescribing Habits and Pain Management Among Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons.

Aesthetic plastic surgery 2022 Vol.46(2) p. 965-971

Sherif RD, Lisiecki J, Waljee J, Gilman RH

관련 도메인

Abstract

[BACKGROUND] The opioid epidemic continues to worsen in the USA. Post-operative opioid prescriptions contribute to development of opioid use disorders, with studies showing 6% of plastic surgery patients developing new persistent use. Prescribing by surgeons is often excessive, and plastic surgery patients only consume about half of their opioid prescriptions. To date, most studies that investigate post-operative opioid prescribing rely on examining patterns of opioid fills after surgery using administrative claims data, which exclude the overwhelming majority of aesthetic surgeries. The purpose of this study is to investigate opioid prescribing habits amongst aesthetic plastic surgeons.

[METHODS] A 20-items survey were sent out to the Aesthetic Society. The survey focussed on general pain management techniques, as well as specific opioid prescribing patterns for several common aesthetic surgeries.

[RESULTS] A total of 291 completed surveys were returned. Respondents were asked about opioid prescribing patterns for several common aesthetic surgeries. Surgeons were most likely to prescribe opioids for post-operative pain control for abdominoplasty (91%). Opioids were least likely to be prescribed for blepharoplasty (58%). For studied surgeries, the number of pills prescribed ranged from 2 to 120 pills per procedure. 45% of respondents reported being concerned that the opioid prescriptions they provide contribute to the development of an opioid use disorder.

[CONCLUSIONS] Aesthetic plastic surgeons vary widely in their opioid prescribing. Additionally, a significant number are concerned that prescriptions they provide contribute to development of opioid use disorders. This study demonstrates the need to work towards optimizing and standardizing pain management techniques in aesthetic patients.

[LEVEL OF EVIDENCE V] This journal requires that authors assign a level of evidence to each article. For a full description of these Evidence-Based Medicine ratings, please refer to the Table of Contents or the online Instructions to Authors www.springer.com/00266 .

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
시술 blepharoplasty 안검성형술 dict 1
시술 abdominoplasty 복부성형술 dict 1
해부 Opioid scispacy 1
약물 [BACKGROUND] The scispacy 1
약물 [RESULTS] A scispacy 1
약물 opioids scispacy 1
약물 [CONCLUSIONS] scispacy 1
질환 Pain C0030193
Pain
scispacy 1
기타 patients scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Analgesics, Opioid; Esthetics; Habits; Humans; Opioid-Related Disorders; Pain Management; Postoperative Pain; Practice Patterns, Physicians'; Surgeons; Surgery, Plastic

🔗 함께 등장하는 도메인

이 논문이 속한 카테고리와 같은 논문에서 자주 함께 다뤄지는 카테고리들

관련 논문