Sentinel & Enterprise

Are dentists introducin­g teens to opioids for oral surgery?

- By Cameron Bullet Cameron Bullet (ceb328@georgetown.edu) is a graduate student in the Georgetown University Health and the Public Interest Program and a graduate of Loyola University Maryland.

When parents warn their children about drug exposure, they tell them tales of the danger of peer pressure from teenagers in murky basements or from the dark corners of the bleachers during a high school football game. Comingof-age movies portray swimming pools full of teens drinking alcohol and smoking marijuana while the protagonis­t dodges bad influences like a spy weaving through radioactiv­e laser beams. The reality for many American teenagers, however, doesn’t align with popular narratives. First- time drug use often begins somewhere far more fluorescen­t: the dentist’s chair.

Getting one’s wisdom teeth removed is a rite of passage for teenagers, right up there with getting a driver’s license or going to prom. When I was 17, on the same day I received my first college acceptance, I was in a chair having my impacted third molars removed. After the procedure I was handed a prescripti­on for an opioid, a type of drug involved in the deaths of nearly 50,000 people per year.

Dentists are the sixth- highest prescriber­s of opioids in the United States and the highest prescriber­s of opioids to patients between the ages of 10 and 19 years old — the age group at the highest risk of developing opioid use disorder. A study completed at the University of Michigan reported that hundreds of young people ages 13 to 30 ( 1.3% of 56,686 patients) who filled an opioid prescripti­on after a wisdom tooth extraction went on to engage in “persistent opioid use” in the following year, even after the window for pain relief had closed — more than 10 times the number of people who did not fill an opioid prescripti­on after such a procedure.

Patients trust the medical profession­als in their lives to make evidence-based decisions for them.

However, the facts have consistent­ly shown that ibuprofen, naproxen and other nonsteroid­al anti- inflammato­ry drugs ( NSAIDS) are equally, or more, effective in the treatment of acute dental pain than any opioid.

We shouldn’t live in a world where we have to question whether our health care provider’s prescripti­ons are in our best interest.

We need to make sure that adolescent­s who get their wisdom teeth out are not unnecessar­ily exposed to a dangerousl­y addictive drug, and that begins with refusing opioids for dental procedures — and holding dentists accountabl­e for poor prescribin­g practices.

Dentists are the sixth-highest prescriber­s of opioids in the United States and the highest prescriber­s of opioids to patients between the ages of 10 and 19 years old.

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