Texarkana Gazette

Phone app helps doctors reframe opioid talks with patients

- By Carla K. Johnson

A phone app is helping doctors have difficult conversati­ons with patients about lowering doses of opioids.

Primary care doctors prescribe nearly half the opioids dispensed in the U.S. They’re increasing­ly being called upon to stem the flow of the highly addictive pills into medicine cabinets. That means writing lower-dose or shorter-term prescripti­ons for some patients, helping others taper off high doses and refusing opioids entirely to others.

The shift enrages some patients.

“People will blow up. We have to call security. They can get very mean,” said Dr. Ashley Ruby, a Philadelph­ia family physician.

U.S. public health officials developed an app to help doctors practice a technique called motivation­al interviewi­ng. It’s part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s opioid guidelines app, which also has a dosage calculator and a copy of the first national prescribin­g guidelines.

The app, released in December, includes these tips for doctors:

Ask open-ended questions. This increases the patient’s involvemen­t in the discussion and allows for more meaningful conversati­on. For example: “What are some of your goals as we manage your pain?”

Reflect. Reflective listening helps the patient feel understood. For example: “It sounds like you miss being able to play with your grandchild­ren.”

Express empathy. “A lot of people are concerned about managing their pain if the amount of opioids is decreased.”

Evoke “change talk.” ”What would you like to see different about your life right now?”

Develop discrepanc­ies. Help patients see the difference between their current behavior and their goals. “You’ve told me that exercise helps you have more energy and reduces stiffness. Why do you think it’s been hard for you to get more active?”

Provide affirmatio­n. “I am glad to see your endurance is improving with physical therapy. Keep it up!”

In the app, doctors can try a hypothetic­al conversati­on with a virtual patient. Red “try again” messages or green, congratula­tory messages pop up when the doctor picks what to say next.

 ?? AP Photo/Carla K. Johnson ?? Melissa Jones, center, a nurse educator with Alosa Health, speaks with social worker Jean Easter, left, and physician’s assistant Emily Braunegg on May 4 in the lunch room of a medical office in Monroevill­e, Pa. Jones visits medical offices in western...
AP Photo/Carla K. Johnson Melissa Jones, center, a nurse educator with Alosa Health, speaks with social worker Jean Easter, left, and physician’s assistant Emily Braunegg on May 4 in the lunch room of a medical office in Monroevill­e, Pa. Jones visits medical offices in western...

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